Where you live in Los Angeles can
significantly impact your health

The Heat-Health Risk Index examines the intersection of rising temperatures, population vulnerability, and health outcomes across communities.

Hear the story

Most people research schools and commutes.
Almost nobody researches heat.

When you're choosing a neighborhood in Los Angeles, heat probably isn't on your checklist. But it should be. The Heat-Health Risk Index exists because where you live in LA determines how much heat you absorb.

And heat in this city is not evenly distributed.

On the same sweltering August afternoon, one neighborhood sits shaded at 88°F while another just 4 miles away bakes on open asphalt at 103°F. That gap follows patterns of tree cover, pavement, housing age, and income. For people with asthma, heart conditions, young children, or elderly family members, that difference is a medical emergency. Over 200 people die from heat in LA every year, most in neighborhoods that had no idea they were high-risk.

This index combines temperature exposure, air quality, and asthma rates into a single risk score for every census tract in LA. Before you sign a lease, you deserve to know what you're moving into.

See the data

The data behind the story

These visualizations illustrate how heat exposure and health vulnerability cluster across LA's neighborhoods, and why where you live matters.

Click to reveal the data
Average Asthma Rate by Heat Exposure Level
Census tracts grouped by temperature percentile
Asthma Rate vs. Heat Exposure
Each dot = one LA census tract
Full Dataset
Showing of census tracts  · 
Census Tract Temp Pct. Asthma Rate Pct. Pollution Pct. Heat-Health Risk Score
Find your area

Ready to see how your neighborhood scores?

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