Portland air quality map
Live air pollution map of Portland • 383.1K Followers • 19:00, May 31 Local time
Stations
Clean Air Facilities
Contributors
Government
2Diplomatic
0Non-profit
0Education
1Corporate
0Healthcare
0Hospitality
0Individual
105Top contributors in Portland
Who is sharing outdoor air quality data in Portland?
Featured station
Discover some of the best station installation in Portland


Station gallery

International School of Portland, Portland
11
Newest stations deployed in Portland
AQI⁺ station rankingNewest stations
Learn more about global air quality
Learn more about air pollution in Portland
Why is Portland air quality bad today?
Portland air quality has achieved a mean annual air quality index (AQI) rating of “good.” For the last two decades, Portland has achieved air pollution standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for all six criteria pollutants measured in real-time: PM2.5, PM10, ozone, carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and sulphur dioxide (SO2).
Despite this success, Portland’s air pollution levels have been climbing since 2016. The concerning trend coincides with a growing population and number of vehicles on the road, numerous EPA regulatory rollbacks, warming global temperatures, and more frequent and severe wildfires.
In the most recent 3-year monitoring period spanning 2016 to 2018, Portland averaged roughly 3 unhealthy pollution days a year.1 Due to the frequency of these events, the American Lung Association (ALA) graded Portland a “C” for 24-hour PM2.5 and 24-hour ozone in their 2019 State of the Air report. This is a slip from Portland’s “A” rating in the 2014 to 2016 monitoring period, which experienced less than 1 unhealthy day a year.
In Portland, each season brings unique pollution challenges. Fine particle pollution tends to rise in the winter months with increased household wood burning and pollution-trapping temperature inversions. Meanwhile, ozone, a secondary pollutant, only becomes problematic in the summer, when abundant sunshine and heat create ideal conditions for its formation.
Monitor Portland air pollution data at the top of this page to stay aware of pollution spikes and health advisories. The “main pollutant” indicates which of the six criteria pollutants is present at the riskiest levels (usually PM2.5 or ozone). When Portland PM2.5 levels are exceedingly high, there is usually a fire burning nearby or domestic wood burning during a cool air inversion. Ozone tends to indicate warmer temperatures and increased vehicular traffic, such as during rush hour, though individual sources may vary.
Why is there air pollution in Portland?
Portland’s unhealthy air pollution is a combination of PM2.5 and ozone pollution, two of the most prevalent and dangerous pollutants in the US. While both pollutants share some of the same sources, such as motor vehicles and fossil fuel combustion at industrial complexes, power plants, and factories, they are also unique.
Ozone, a secondary pollutant, occurs in the atmosphere when high temperatures (over 84°F) and sunlight (UV radiation) causes pollutants, nitrogen oxides (NOx), and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to react. Precursor pollutants are largely emitted by vehicles and smoke stacks; however, they can also travel hundreds of miles from neighboring cities when carried by wind. Portland, for example, can be adversely affected by Seattle air quality, Bend air quality, or Eugene air quality.
Portland’s ozone season runs from May through September, when the city experiences an average of 51 days over 80 degrees.2 As temperatures continue to rise as a result of climate change, it will be increasingly difficult to manage ozone levels. Limiting the emissions of pollution sources, such as switching to cleaner energy, transitioning to electric vehicles, and cooperating with regional towns and cities, offer an opportunity for reducing ozone despite warming temperatures creating more ideal conditions for its formation.
Portland’s PM2.5 pollution tends to be attributable to vehicular emissions, wildfires in the late summer and early fall, and domestic wood burning in the winter months.
The Mosier Creek Fire, which burned east of Hood River in the town of Mosier in August 2020, is an example of a wildfire that caused “unhealthy” PM2.5 pollution levels in Portland.3
More often, PM2.5 spikes are the result of domestic wood burning and cool air inversions in the winter. This is the case for Portland’s most polluted months in November and December. Cool air inversions, or temperature inversions, occur when warm air caps colder air below, preventing the normal dispersion of air pollution in the atmosphere. Snow cover and sparse light contribute to these conditions, creating freezing cold surface air. Cool air inversions persist, accumulating surface-level air pollution until temperature and weather change allow sunlight to warm the surface air more than the air above.
How does Portland Oregon reduce air pollution?
Portland has made significant gains in improving air quality over the last two decades. The progress has been the result of a combination of regulations on a local, state, and federal level which have increasingly shifted to cleaner and more efficient uses of energy, and emission limits. There is still more to be done.
In 2019, Portland’s most polluted months were November and December (respectively), with PM2.5 concentrations of 18.4 μg/m3 and 17.1 μg/m3 (three times the average PM2.5 concentration of summer months). Particle pollution spikes during these months have caused Portland to rank among the top 25 cities with the most short-term particulate pollution, according to the ALA’s 2019 report.
High PM2.5 levels during these months are the result of domestic woodburning and temperature inversions, which create a pollution-trapping effect. These seasonal particle pollution fluctuations cause Portland to average more PM2.5 pollution than New York City, the most populous metropolitan area in the US (which experiences an annual average of 7 μg/m3).
A Multnomah County ordinance passed in January 2018 seeks to reduce the impact of wood burning in the winter by enforcing a ban based on Portland’s live air quality conditions. Wood burning is limited to times of “green” or “good” US AQI levels.4 Exceptions have been made, however, for those with permits, or if wood burning is for cooking, heat, and light during a power outage, or otherwise serves as a household's only source of heat.
When will air quality in Portland improve?
Ozone and PM2.5 pollution contribute equally to Portland air pollution, with 1.5 unhealthy pollution days attributed to ozone and 1.3 unhealthy pollution days attributed to PM2.5 pollution. Improvements to Portland air quality must therefore strive to manage both PM2.5 and ozone precursors.
Emissions from motor vehicles are a leading source of both ozone and particle pollution (PM2.5) in Portland. Targeting emission reductions here can reduce prevalence of both pollutants.
During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, lockdown measures shuttered non-essential businesses and greatly reduced non-essential travel. In doing so, Portland had a rare glimpse into the impact reduced traffic emissions could have on the city’s air quality. A study conducted by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality found that COVID-19 restrictions led to 40 percent less traffic on the I-5, a 60 percent drop in nitrogen oxides( an ozone precursor pollutant), and a 25 percent drop in black carbon (PM2.5 soot).5
Sustaining these reductions in the long term is likely possible by shifting at least half of currently registered motor vehicles to electric vehicles or other hybrid low emission alternatives. The State of Oregon currently seeks to add 3.3 million zero emission vehicles by 2025 and hopes that all vehicles will be zero-emission by 2050.6 Such changes will result in drastic improvements to Portland’s air quality.
Where is pollution in Portland coming from?
Air pollution in Portland comes from a range of sources, including a combination of mobile sources (motor vehicles), stationary sources (smoke stacks from power plants and factories), and area sources (agricultural areas and wood burning fireplaces).
In much of the US, mobile sources represent the largest single emission source. This emission source is particularly culpable for Portland’s ozone challenges.
Stationary emission sources in Portland include Portland General Electric, Oregon’s only coal-fired power plant, pulp and paper mills, and natural gas-fired plants.7 Most of Portland’s stationary emission sources are concentrated on the northern end of the city.
Racist redlining practices dating back to the 1930s have had a lasting impact on Portland’s neighborhood demographics and the distribution of air pollution in the city. High-polluting city features such as airports, major roadways, factories, industrial complexes, and power plants have historically been placed near these disadvantaged communities, further driving down the value of the homes in these neighborhoods while also burdening them with higher amounts of air pollution.
A study led by Portland State University found that 42 percent of historically redlined neighborhoods are less than 1 mile from the city’s top 10 polluters.8 As a result of the lingering impact of redlining, 38 percent of Portland’s non-white residents live in a 2-mile radius of these emission sources. Not only do these communities bear a disproportionate amount of air pollution, they also suffer more adverse and acute health effects as a result.
Non-white Americans who have historically occupied lower-income neighborhooods have 50 percent higher infant mortality and low birth weights than whites as well as higher rates of diabetes, high blood pressure, physical disabilities, stroke, diabetes, heart disease, and cancer deaths. These negative effects, brought on in part by commercial and government operations, must be addressed as an environmental justice issue. All communities deserve the right to healthy, clean air.
+ Article Resources
[1] American Lung Association. (2020). State of the air – 2020.
[2] Current Results. (2020). Portland temperatures: Averages by month.
[3] Raineri J. (2020, August 13). Air quality advisory in place for parts of the Gorge from Mosier Creek Fire. KGW.
[4] Multnomah County Environmental Health Services. (2020). Winter wood burning restrictions.
[5] Williams K. (2020, May 1). Amid the coronavirus shutdown, some types of air pollution down by as much as 60 percent in Portland. The Oregonian/OregonLive.
[6] City of Portland Oregon. (2020). ENN-5.06 - Portland 2017 Electric Vehicle Strategy.
[7] Learn S. (2019, January 10). Power plants Oregon's largest single sources of global warming emissions, new EPA inventory shows. The Oregonian.
[8] Profita C. (2020, April 29). Study: More people of color live near Portland’s biggest air polluters. Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB).
Where is the cleanest air quality in Portland?
- Arnold Creek7
- Vancouver-Fruit Valley8
- Council Crest11
- International School of Portland11
- SW 25th Portland - Taylors Ferry11
- MULTCO B-311 JJC12
- Vancouver-W 6th St12
- Portland Lane Middle School13
- Roosevelt High School13
- Vancouver-Main St13
- Portland Cully Helensview14
- SE Clinton & SE 41st14
- West Portland Park16
- Council Crest Park17
- Lenox17
- Portland McDaniel High School17
- Russell IQAir17
- Germantown Road18
- Martin Luther King Junior Boulevard18
- Pearl District18
- Portland Lincoln High School18
- Southeast Boise Street18
- 2400-2598 SE Lincoln St19
- Brooklyn19
- Cully Grove19
- Southwest Bridlemile Lane19
- Southwest Portland19
- Woods Park19
- NE 16th Ave20
- Northwest Verde Vista Terrace20
- SE Woodward Street20
- Bridge Avenue21
- Cedarwood Waldorf School21
- North Jarrett Street21
- North Russet Street21
- Parr Lumber MLK21
- 701-999 SE 72nd Ave22
- Eastmoreland - Tolman22
- Hayhurst22
- Hazelwood22
- SW Westwood View22
- Upper Multnomah Village22
- 3082 NE Regents Drive23
- 48th Place23
- Fairmount Blvd23
- Northeast Laddington Court23
- Northwest Quincy Avenue 223
- SW Fairmount Blvd23
- Salusa23
- Southwest 6th Avenue23
- Southwest Edgewood Road23
- 1415 NW 11th Ave24
- 1907 ZE24
- Brentwood-Darlington24
- Crestwood24
- Jarrett Street24
- McKenna Park24
- North Morgan Street24
- Observador Medioambiental de Kenton24
- SW Palatine Street24
- Southeast Raymond Street24
- Southeast Yamhill Street24
- Ventura Park24
- 24th Ave & Gladstone25
- 2911 SW Bertha Blvd25
- Alphabet District25
- Northwest Alpine Terrace25
- SE 61st Ave25
- Southwest Knights Boulevard25
- Bridlemile - Honey Farm Neighborhood26
- Eastridge Park26
- Glisan Street26
- Hosford-Abernethy26
- Multnomah County Library - St. Johns26
- North Portland26
- North Portland 226
- Richmond26
- 10342 NW Langworthy Terrace27
- 1601-1999 SE 45th Ave27
- 501-545 SE Peacock Ln27
- 532-798 Glendoveer Golf Course27
- 6238 NE Mason St27
- Cully27
- Eastmoreland27
- Hassalo Street27
- Laurelhurst Park27
- NCA Parkrose Palace27
- NE Rose Pkwy27
- North Willamette Boulevard27
- Northwest 24th Avenue27
- Sellwood Boulevard27
- South Waterfront Greenway27
- Southeast Cora Street27
- Southeast Flavel Street27
- Southeast Malden Street27
- Southwest Falcon Street27
- Walnut Park Complex27
- 3700-3798 N Melrose Dr28
- 4224 Southeast Harrison Street28
- 701-799 N Blandena St28
- Mojo Dojo Casa House28
- Portland - SE Lafayette28
- SE 141st Avenue28
- 3030 SW Pendleton St29
- Creston - Kenilworth 229
- Grant Park29
- SE 31st Avenue29
- SE Insley Street29
- 3143 SE Salmon Street31
- 4704-4600 Lents Park31
- Northeast 12th Avenue33
- 3043-3001 NE 160th Dr36
- MULTCO B-545 BHRC-BUSHONG BLDG36
- Hayden Island37
- Woodstock44










