Multiple Sources · 53 states
States With Best Air Quality
Air quality directly affects public health, with poor air linked to asthma, heart disease, lung cancer, and premature death. States with the best air quality tend to have lower population density, less industrial activity, favorable geography, and stricter environmental regulations. Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont consistently rank among the cleanest-air states. Climate change is worsening air quality through increased wildfire smoke and higher temperatures that accelerate ozone formation. The health benefits of clean air are substantial -- the Clean Air Act's pollution reductions have prevented hundreds of thousands of premature deaths.
Key Findings
- 1Virgin Islands leads with a air quality score of 85, followed by Hawaii (82) and Alaska (77).
- 2Illinois ranks last at 56, while Virgin Islands leads at 85.
- 3The national median across all states is 65 (Delaware at the midpoint).
- 4The top 10 states are: Virgin Islands, Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Nebraska, Virginia, Maine, Vermont, Indiana, Maryland.
Full Ranking: States With Best Air Quality
Source: Census ACS 2023 5-Year Estimates
| # | State | AQ Score |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wyoming | 66 |
| 2 | Wisconsin | 61 |
| 3 | West Virginia | 69 |
| 4 | Washington | 67 |
| 5 | Virginia | 71 |
| 6 | Virgin Islands | 85 |
| 7 | Vermont | 70 |
| 8 | Utah | 61 |
| 9 | Texas | 61 |
| 10 | Tennessee | 67 |
| 11 | South Dakota | 65 |
| 12 | South Carolina | 67 |
| 13 | Rhode Island | 67 |
| 14 | Puerto Rico | 76 |
| 15 | Pennsylvania | 67 |
| 16 | Oregon | 64 |
| 17 | Oklahoma | 61 |
| 18 | Ohio | 66 |
| 19 | North Dakota | 61 |
| 20 | North Carolina | 68 |
| 21 | New York | 67 |
| 22 | New Mexico | 66 |
| 23 | New Jersey | 64 |
| 24 | New Hampshire | 69 |
| 25 | Nevada | 64 |
| 26 | Nebraska | 72 |
| 27 | Montana | 67 |
| 28 | Missouri | 65 |
| 29 | Mississippi | 59 |
| 30 | Minnesota | 64 |
| 31 | Michigan | 66 |
| 32 | Massachusetts | 65 |
| 33 | Maryland | 69 |
| 34 | Maine | 70 |
| 35 | Louisiana | 65 |
| 36 | Kentucky | 65 |
| 37 | Kansas | 61 |
| 38 | Iowa | 65 |
| 39 | Indiana | 69 |
| 40 | Illinois | 56 |
| 41 | Idaho | 63 |
| 42 | Hawaii | 82 |
| 43 | Georgia | 65 |
| 44 | Florida | 64 |
| 45 | District of Columbia | 63 |
| 46 | Delaware | 65 |
| 47 | Connecticut | 65 |
| 48 | Colorado | 61 |
| 49 | California | 56 |
| 50 | Arkansas | 64 |
| 51 | Arizona | 58 |
| 52 | Alaska | 77 |
| 53 | Alabama | 67 |
Methodology
Rankings are based on American Community Survey (ACS) 2023 5-Year estimates from the US Census Bureau. All 50 states and the District of Columbia are included. The ACS surveys approximately 3.5 million households annually and provides detailed demographic, social, economic, and housing data. 5-Year estimates offer the most reliable data for state-level comparisons by averaging responses over a 60-month period. Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Virgin Islands has the highest air quality score at 85, according to Census ACS 2023 data. Hawaii and Alaska round out the top three.
Illinois has the lowest air quality score at 56. California is second-lowest at 56.
The median across all 53 states is 65. Note that the national median and the state-level median are calculated differently — the state median represents the midpoint when all states are ranked.
This data comes from the American Community Survey (ACS) 2023 5-Year estimates published by the US Census Bureau. The ACS surveys approximately 3.5 million households annually and provides the most comprehensive demographic data available between decennial censuses.
Rankings are based on the latest available Census ACS data (currently 2023 5-Year estimates). The Census Bureau releases new ACS data annually, typically in September. Our data was last updated on April 12, 2026.
Rankings are based on American Community Survey (ACS) 2023 5-Year estimates from the US Census Bureau. All 50 states and the District of Columbia are included. The ACS surveys approximately 3.5 million households annually and provides detailed demographic, social, economic, and housing data. 5-Year estimates offer the most reliable data for state-level comparisons by averaging responses over a 60-month period. Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.