Air quality in Los Angeles
Air quality index (AQI⁺) and PM2.5 air pollution in Los Angeles • 15.7M Followers • 04:00, Apr 17
35
US AQI⁺Good
Main pollutant:
PM2.5
6.3 µg/m³
16°
7 km/h
87 %
Hourly forecast
Los Angeles air quality index (AQI⁺) forecast
Daily forecast
Los Angeles air quality index (AQI⁺) forecast
| Today | 37 | 20° 15° | 19 km/h | 65% | |
| Sat | 31 | 23° 15° | 17 km/h | 59% | |
| Sun | 52 | 22° 16° | 22 km/h | 55% |
Air pollutants
What is the current air quality in Los Angeles?
PM2.5 concentration is currently 1.3 times the World Health Organization annual PM2.5 guideline value.
Health recommendations
Enjoy outdoor activities |
Open your windows to bring clean, fresh air indoors Get a monitor |
Clean Air Facilities
Pollen
What is the pollen count in Los Angeles today?
Index
High
Tree Low | 25% |
Grass High | 75% |
Weed Low | 25% |
Source:
wetter.comHealth recommendations
Enjoy outdoor activities |
Open your windows to bring clean, fresh air indoors Get a monitor |
Pollen
What is the pollen count in Los Angeles today?
Index
High
Tree Low | 25% |
Grass High | 75% |
Weed Low | 25% |
Source:
wetter.comMost polluted locations near Los Angeles
Worldwide AQI⁺ rankingStation ranking
Real-time AQI⁺ station ranking for stations in Los Angeles
Historic air quality near Los Angeles
History
Historic air quality graph for Los Angeles
Historic air quality near Los Angeles
History
Historic air quality graph for Los Angeles
Clean Air Facilities
Most polluted locations near Los Angeles
Worldwide AQI⁺ rankingStation ranking
Real-time AQI⁺ station ranking for stations in Los Angeles
Measure your own air quality
Get a monitor and contribute air quality data in your city.
Learn more about air pollution in Los Angeles
What is the air quality in Los Angeles?
Los Angeles air quality averages a US AQI or air quality index rating of “moderate.” Monthly averages in 2019 varied from AQI 32 (“good”) in February to AQI 64 (“moderate”) in November. Despite seemingly optimistic ratings, Los Angeles’s air pollution is among the worst in the United States, both for PM2.5 and ozone.
PM2.5 is airborne particulate matter measuring up to 2.5 microns in size. It is widely regarded as one of the most harmful pollutants to human health for its prevalence at dangerous levels. Exposure to PM2.5 has been linked to health effects such as heart disease, respiratory illness, and premature death.
For PM2.5, the greater Los Angeles county contains 9 of the 15 most polluted cities in the United States, according to the 2019 World Air Quality Report. In this same report, the city of Los Angeles ranked 82nd in the US (out of 1,517 included cities). Its annual average, however, differed by only 4 micrograms from the number one most polluted city in the U.S.: Portola, California.
According to the 2019 State of the Air report, which compared data across 229 metropolitan areas, Los Angeles has the worst ozone air pollution in the United States. Ozone is a gas pollutant formed when sunlight reacts with nitrogen oxides and organic substances. Vehicle exhaust contains both the nitrogen oxides and reactive organic substances needed to form ozone, so traffic is frequently identified as a leading source. Like PM2.5, ozone can cause health effects ranging from respiratory infections and inflammation to premature death.
Together, PM2.5 and ozone form the smog that Los Angeles is often known for. The summer months of June, July, and August tend to be more polluted than other months for both PM2.5 and ozone. This is because of drier conditions, less rainfall, higher temperatures, and a higher frequency of wind-blown dust and wildfires fanned by the Santa Ana winds.
Los Angeles does not currently meet the U.S. EPA’s national air quality standards for both PM2.5 and ozone.1 The associated health implications are evident in the numbers. According to the County of Los Angeles Public Health Department, 1 in 10 children have been diagnosed with asthma.2 Overall risk for cancer, meanwhile, is increased by 900 for every million, according to the South Coast Air Quality Management District.
Air pollution data is an important resource for taking action to mitigate these health effects. Refer to the top of this page for Los Angeles’s forecast air quality data and real-time air quality data.
Has air quality improved in Los Angeles?
Los Angeles air quality has dramatically improved over the last 30 years because of the 1990 amendments to the Clean Air Act. Most recently, year-over-year trends have resulted in reductions in L.A. air pollution of 10.6% from 2017 to 2018, and another 11.8% from 2018 to 2019.
Data collected by EPA governmental monitors and analyzed in the COVID-19 Air Quality Report found that Los Angeles experienced a long stretch of WHO-target air quality (< 10 μg/m3) from March 7-28, 2020, its longest streak since at least 1995. This 18-day stretch of exceptionally clean air is likely the result of lockdown measures put in place to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, during which non-essential businesses were ordered to close and residents were urged to stay at home. March 2020 became Los Angeles’s cleanest air quality month on record, averaging PM2.5 levels of 5.6 μg/m3 (US AQI 23).
Yearly averages are often dependent on the wildfire season, which can contribute to greatly elevated periods of city-wide air quality. The last three years have seen fewer state-wide forest fires and burned acreage, though wildfires are expected to increase in frequency over the long term as temperatures rise droughts become longer.
Why does Los Angeles have unhealthy air quality?
Los Angeles is a city notorious for its smog, a combination of particle and ozone pollution. The prevalence of these pollutants result from many factors, including the burning of fossil fuels, especially by vehicles, ships, planes and manufacturing, as well as wildfires.
The large population of 4 million in Los Angeles, with another 6 million in the surrounding Los Angeles county, contributes significantly to the its ‘nonattainment’ air quality status because of heavy vehicular emissions and traffic congestion. It is estimated that there are 6.5 million vehicles in the city of Los Angeles alone. Current mayor Eric Garcetti set forth a sustainability plan that seeks to increase zero-emission vehicles in the city, growing their share from 1.4% in 2018 to 25% by 2025, and 100% by 2050.3 Power consumption, BBQs, and other such personal local emissions are also a major source of air pollution as a result of the city’s population.
Los Angeles’s shipping industry is another key contributor, particularly in recent years as trade with Asia has expanded. The Port of Los Angeles and the Port of Long Beach are the two busiest container ports in the United States. 4 Many port operations rely on fossil fuel or diesel to power ships, trucks, and other transportation. Since the implementation of the Clean Air Action Plan of 2006, particulate matter (PM) from these operations has dropped by 87%, while nitrogen oxides, an important precursor pollutant to ozone, are down 58%. Still, the ports remain a significant pollution source, producing an estimated 100 tons of smog daily, with little year-over-year improvement since 2011. The Los Angeles air pollution map often reveals higher AQI in Los Angeles’s port areas. Port authorities are looking for new ways to further decrease these emissions, such as investing cleaner energy transport vehicles.
Although they’re temporary and sporadic, wildfires often impact yearly average air pollution in Los Angeles. A combination of dry conditions, highly flammable fuels (such as the volatile Douglas fir and ponderosa pine tree species), increasingly hot summers, steep mountains, and strong Santa Ana winds combine to make the area highly susceptible to large and severe wildfires.
The geography of Los Angeles, in a basin surrounded by mountains, is further conducive to trapping air pollution. While many locations around the world commonly experience temperature inversions in the winter, Los Angeles often experiences a similar effect in warmer months. This happens when relatively warm air from the Great Basin or inland Los Angeles traps cooler, ocean air close to the Earth’s surface, preventing polluted air from rising and dispersing. This type of temperature inversion is called a marine inversion. The Los Angeles marine inversion can often be attributed to the layer of haze shrouding downtown buildings in pictures from the famous Hollywood sign.
How to reduce air pollution in Los Angeles?
While air pollution levels in Los Angeles still far exceed federal standards, significant improvements have been made in the last two decades. California began addressing air pollution in 1967 when it established the California Air Resources Board (CARB), an organization whose mission is to unite local governments, businesses, and residents with the goal of researching and legislating effective air pollution policy.5 This board was later empowered by the legislative action of the federal government in 1970, that established the Clean Air Act. The Clean Air Act, along with the later 1977 and 1990 amendments, created federal air quality monitoring, emission control, and enforcement. The Clean Air Act has been deemed the most effective federal regulations for clean air, estimated to have prevented as many as 237,000 deaths from 1970 to 2020.6
Current efforts have been led primarily by local and state regulations, furthering an agenda to reduce emissions across the transportation sector along with a number of high-polluting industries.
Among the most promising efforts is the shift towards electric vehicles (EVs). Currently, motor vehicles represent the leading source of city-wide PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide, an ozone precursor pollutant. Other improvements, such as increasing the percentage of the power grid that relies on renewable energy, will be a critical step.
Long-standing trends of improving air quality in Los Angeles, coupled with promising new legislation and shifts in purchasing behavior, provide optimism for the future of air quality in Los Angeles.
Why is the air quality bad today in Los Angeles?
Changes in weather can impact local air quality. It is weather that often helps to explain a city’s air quality variations day to day when emissions remain relatively constant. Sunlight, wind speed and direction, temperature, and pressure conditions all shape current conditions. Examples of this include:
- Sunlight and heat can cause some gas pollutants (nitrogen dioxide and volatile organic compounds) to chemically react and form ground-level ozone, a secondary pollutant. Higher temperatures accelerate this reaction, increasing ozone levels.7
- Pressure cells and temperature inversions (a reversal of normal temperature conditions, in which hot air blankets cooler surface air, acting like a lid) can prevent emissions from dispersing naturally, causing a buildup of ground-level pollution.
- Rain can tamp down emissions, improving air quality.
- Wind direction and speed are perhaps the most impactful weather condition on city emissions. Stagnant air can cause emissions to become trapped in the L.A. Basin, while strong winds can move emissions out of the narrow outlets of the San Gabriel Mountains.
In addition to weather, extreme pollution events such as wildfires can cause significant spikes in L.A. air quality. Such pollution events have become increasingly common in the area over the last few decades as a result of anthropogenic climate change. When smoke fills the L.A. Basin, the region's geography and weather conditions can make it difficult for the air pollution to disperse, resulting in slowly accumulating pollution levels until the emissions stop or weather changes. Use the IQAir website and app to follow changing AQI levels in Los Angeles. When air is forecast to be unhealthy, reduce your exposure by limiting strenuous outdoor activity, closing your doors and windows, and running an air purifier and wearing an air pollution mask if available.
+ Article Resources
[1] California non-attainment/maintenance status for each county by year for all criteria pollutants. (2020).
[2] Mazza S. (2018, August 7). Investigation finds LA Harbor-area smog challenges grow as new health threats emerge.
[3] Roth S. (2019, May 6). Los Angeles sets dramatic new goals for electric cars.
[4] Vock DC. (2019, June). Can America’s biggest ports go green?
[5] California Air Resources Board. (2020). History. CARB.
[6] United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). (2020). Benefits and costs of the Clean Air Act 1990-2020, the second prospective study.
[7] National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (2020). Clearing the air on weather and air quality.
Where is the cleanest air quality in Los Angeles?
- Bryn Mawr Drive1
- Mt. Washington School1
- Playa Vista1
- Dowlen Drive2
- CCA Montague and Telfair4
- Mar Vista4
- Tacuba Street4
- Del Rey Gardens6
- Lincoln and Ave 517
- Lindenhurst and Crescent Heights7
- 1352 Pso De La Lora8
- LA station10
- MobNukem PR10
- Wilshire Blvd10
- 12453 Stanwood Pl11
- Amherst Avenue11
- CCA Hillcrest and Obama11
- York11
- Brentwood School East Campus12
- 143 S Cliffwood Ave13
- 4451-4507 Clinton St13
- 10925 Odell Ave14
- GIBSON ST. AND SHENANDOAH14
- Stanley Avenue14
- Elysian Heights (Preston Ave)15
- La Fayette PP / Marathon15
- Selma15
- VVAMPLincoln215
- 502-562 Por La Mar Cir16
- DTLA16
- Glassell Park16
- 2089-2055 Old Ranch Rd17
- CCA Carl and Ralston17
- Calle de Madrid17
- Hart St ES (4445)17
- NASA - Terrace 4917
- Pagoda Place17
- Palms17
- Point Fermin17
- West 74th Street17
- 2449 Arbutus Way18
- Central Belden Drive18
- Gramercy Swamp18
- SFF18
- Baltimore Street19
- CHIME Institute's Schwarzenegger Community School19
- PicWood_Malcolm_Ave_01 station19
- Vulcan Drive19
- Chatsworth Lake Manor20
- Hill Drive20
- Villa Marina Townhomes20
- 146 N. Meyler Street21
- 588 Dryad Rd21
- Cedarhurst Circle21
- Cielo Way21
- Colfax Meadows21
- Laurel ES (4808)21
- Linnie Canal Venice21
- Scandia Way21
- Sunland Boulevard21
- University of California Outside21
- Westchester21
- 10380 Glenbarr Avenue22
- 22nd and Meyler22
- CCA Bates and Sunset22
- CCA Borden and Carl22
- Farlin Street22
- Green Verdugo Drive22
- Huntington Palisades22
- Playa del Rey22
- Rustic Lane22
- Serrania ES (6606)22
- 14228 Hortense St23
- 254 Bronwood Ave23
- 3834 Griffith View Dr23
- 4238-4294 Division St23
- Hacienda23
- Main St. Ladwp23
- Marco Triangle Park, Venice, California23
- Village Green23
- West Los Angeles station23
- 1431 Avenida de Cortez24
- 1630 N Main St24
- 17220 Palisades Cir.24
- 767 W Museum Dr24
- 846 Micheltorena St24
- Ashwood Avenue24
- Camden Avenue24
- Escalon Dr24
- Rose Avenue24
- 1589 N Main St25
- 1639-1501 N Main St25
- 250 S Bristol Ave25
- Grand View Boulevard25
- Meadow Valley Terrace25
- Mercado La Paloma (Outdoor)25
- 1237 N Commonwealth Ave26
- 28 Driftwood St26
- 410-582 Amalfi Dr26
- 859 Warner Ave26
- Brentwood School West Campus26
- Fletcher Square26
- North Hollywood26
- Overland Avenue26
- Wilmington Pk ES (7781)26
- 1116 7th Ave27
- 11500 Canton Dr27
- 1539 N Main St27
- Mellon Avenue27
- Mid-City Magnet ES (3500)27
- Nichols Canyon Road27
- San Pascual ES (6493)27
- Taper ES (7035)27
- West 52nd Street27
- 10733 Charnock Rd28
- 1160-1122 W 24th St28
- 11907 Pacific Ave28
- 2282 Mandeville Canyon Rd28
- 3198-3148 Country Club Dr28
- 4027 Hayvenhurst Dr28
- 4865 Patrae St28
- 551 Toyopa Dr28
- Arroyo Seco Magnet SPAN (4322)28
- CCA 27th & Brighton28
- Osage Avenue28
- 10663 Bellagio Rd29
- 1199 Tower Grove Dr29
- 22023 Bryant St29
- 2841 Lawndale Dr29
- 335 Homewood Rd29
- 3881 Mandeville Canyon Rd29
- 514 N Commonwealth Ave29
- Crestwood Hills Preschool29
- Hancock Park29
- Huntington29
- Mandeville Canyon29
- Micheltorena ES (5288)29
- Palisades Dr29
- Truxton29
- Van Nuys29
- Vinedale ES (7548)29
- 1302 N Poinsettia Pl30
- 1322 Pavia Pl30
- 459 S Sherbourne Dr30
- Broad Ave ES (2527)30
- 10056 Noble Ave31
- 1149 Napoli Dr31
- 1201-1291 3rd Ave31
- 12910 Panama St31
- 201 S Moreno Dr31
- 6215-6223 Oak Hill Ave31
- 646 Frontenac Ave31
- 740 Amalfi Dr31
- 756 S Grand View St31
- South Shores Magnet ES (6870)31
- West Hollywood31
- 3417-3435 Farmdale Ave32
- 5261 Thornburn St32
- 999-901 El Medio Ave32
- Gridley ES (4295)32
- Leavey 532
- 4074 Michael Ave33
- 989 Corsica Dr33
- Bel Air Hills33
- Columbus MS (8102)33
- Hatteras Street33
- Trinity ES (7219)33
- 1661 Alta Mura Rd34
- 7th St ES (6616)34
- Buchanan ES (2603)34
- Dexter34
- Eagle Rock ES (3507)34
- Frank Del Olmo ES (2386)34
- Gardena HS (8664)34
- Justice St ES (4692)34
- Valerio ES (7384)34
- Welby ES (7637)34
- 2853-2841 N Beverly Glen Blvd35
- Annandale ES (2151)35
- Cabrillo ES (2685)35
- Encino - Hayvenhurst35
- Kevin35
- Okean Place35
- Silverlake35
- Travis St.35
- Wilton Pl El (7808)35
- 107th St ES (5857)36
- 8360 Chase Ave36
- Glenfeliz Blvd ES (4164)36
- Hancock Park ES (4397)36
- Haynes ES (4473)36
- Museum Terrace Apartments36
- Westland School36
- Wonderland ES (7849)36
- 15921 Alcima Ave37
- Brentwood Tigertail37
- Canyon ES (2795)37
- Canyon ES (2795) #137
- Colina Glen37
- Jefferson HS (8714)37
- Mandeville Canyon Residence37
- Marlton ES (1949)37
- Metropolitan HS (8757)37
- Mid-Wilshire37
- Silver Lake Grassy Patch37
- Top Of Kenter37
- Weingart East LA YMCA37
- Westport Hts ES (7712)37
- 59th St ES (3795)38
- El Sereno Middle School38
- Gulf ES (4315)38
- Harvard-Westlake Middle School38
- Van Nuys HS/Rogers CHS (8895)38
- W. Avenue 3538
- name: 'Carpenter ES (2822)38
- 14705 Oracle Pl39
- 42nd St ES (3959)39
- 6649-6701 W 88th St39
- 8206 Skyline Dr39
- Allesandro ES (2068)39
- Brentwood Glen39
- Central Los Angeles39
- Coeur D Alene ES (6342)39
- Estrella ES (2942)39
- Hazen Drive39
- Lower Amalfi - Riviera39
- Multnomah St ES (5425)39
- N St Andrews Pl39
- Point Fermin Magnet ES (6137)39
- Riverside Drive39
- Roybal LC (8544)39
- Sheridan St ES (6685)39
- Victory ES (7521)39
- Warner ES (7616)39
- Westchester-Kentwood South39
- Westminster ES (7699)39
- Johnny 540
- Berendo MS (8057)41
- Chatsworth ES (3027)41
- Corsica Drive41
- Hamilton HS (8686)41
- Normandie ES (5630)41
- Revere MS (8356) #341
- Sherman Oaks ES (6699)41
- 135th St ES (5877)42
- Esperanza ES (2383)42
- Jordan HS (8721)42
- Lenicia Weemes ES (7151)42
- Marquez ES (5164) #242
- Oxnard ES (5918)42
- Palisades ES (5959) #242
- Palisades HS #242
- Budlong ES (2616)43
- Compton ES (3205)43
- Grand View ES (4247)43
- Lanai Rd ES (4764)43
- N Main St43
- Pacific View43
- Revere MS (8356) #143
- Sky Valley Road43
- Van Ness ES (7425)43
- Venice Beach43
- 10998-10900 Verano Rd44
- 3810 N Riley Ln44
- Fairburn ES station44
- Gault St44
- Le Conte MS (8226)44
- Logan ES (4904)44
- Lorena St ES (4945)44
- Marquez ES (5164) #144
- Marvin ES (5178)44
- Meier St44
- North Holywood44
- Palisades HS #344
- Palisades HS #444
- Revere MS (8356)44
- Sierra Vista ES (6767)44
- Solano ES (6836)44
- St. Paul44
- Valley View ES (7397)44
- Webster MS (8481)44
- Westwood ES (7740)44
- Wilshire Crest ES (7795)44
- El Medio Bluff Outdoor45
- Emerson MS station45
- Hollywood HS (8693)45
- Los Feliz ES (4986)45
- Playa Del Rey ES (6110)45
- Sierra Park ES (6753)45
- Atwater ES (2233)46
- El Sereno ES (3562)46
- Rosemont ES (6370)46
- Walgrove ES (7603)46
- Weigand ES (7634)46
- Brockton ES (2548)47
- Canfield ES (2740)47
- Mar Vista ES47
- Palisades HS #147
- Utah ES (7370)47
- Aragon ES (2178)48
- Brentwood Sci Mag ES (2507)48
- Marquez ES (5164) #3"48
- President ES (6148)48
- Arminta St ES (2205)49
- Bellagio Rd, Los Angeles, CA49
- Encino ES (3616)49
- Los Angeles City Fire Dept. Station 2350
- Pacific Palisades ES (5959)50
- Royal Oak Rd50
- playa vista house50
- 1554 Chastain Pkwy E51
- 16735 Charmel Ln51
- Dixie Canyon ES (3438)51
- Knox ES, Dr Owen Lloyd (6869)51
- Newcastle ES (5479)51
- Reseda ES (6233)51
- San Pedro ES (6507)51
- 3858-3700 Vinton Ave52
- Kenter Canyon Elementary School52
- La Salle ES (4786)52
- Mountain View ES (5404)52
- Cheviot hills, ca53
- Crescent Hts Bl EEC (9597)53
- Crestwood Hills-Tigertail Rd53
- Roscomare ES (6363)53
- Vanalden ES (7411)53
- Virginia ES (7575)53
- cheviot hills south of manning53
- Estepa Dr / Crystal View55
- Silver Triangle55
- Riviera (Outdoor)56
- Delgany Ave in Playa62
- Pilgrim School- Soccer Field64












