Portland noise map: where the city is loudest
In Portland, Oregon, 7.2% of residents live with average-day transportation noise of 60 dB or louder — road, rail and aviation combined. That ranks Portland #48 of 297 US cities of 100,000+ people, above the national median. The map below colors all 164 census tracts by exposure, from the quietest blocks to the loudest.
Last updated:
| US rank (of 297 cities, 100k+ pop) | #48 |
|---|---|
| Residents above 60 dB | 7.2% |
| Residents above 70 dB | 1.4% |
| Residents in the 45–60 dB band | 40.1% |
| Population (ACS 2016–2020) | 650,191 |
| Census tracts mapped | 164 |
Portland's 164 census tracts span the full range of the federal noise map. Of its 650,191 residents, 7.2% are exposed to 60 dB or more of average-day road, rail and aviation noise. Within that, 1.4% face the most severe band — 70 dB or louder, the level at which sustained exposure starts damaging hearing. A further 40.1% sit in the 45–60 dB band — a noticeable background hum rather than a hearing risk. Overall the city ranks #48 of 297, above the national median.
Among Oregon's 4 cities of 100,000+ residents, Portland is the 1st-loudest. Nationally it sits just below New York, NY (#47) and just above Downey, CA (#49).
On the map, green tracts are the quietest and red tracts the loudest, with each colored by the share of its own residents above 60 dB — so you can see exactly which parts of Portland carry the noise. The loudest tracts track the city's busiest road, rail and flight corridors. These are measured values from the US DOT's 2020 National Transportation Noise Map paired with Census population, aggregated to tracts by the University of Washington — real data per tract, no interpolation and no estimate.
Portland noise: the specifics
- Ranks #48 of 297 US cities (100k+ pop) by share of residents exposed to ≥60 dB transportation noise.
- 7.2% of Portland's 650,191 residents live with 60 dB or louder average-day transportation noise.
- 1.4% are in the severe 70 dB+ band; 40.1% sit in the 45–60 dB moderate range.
- Computed across 164 census tracts from the federal BTS 2020 noise map × ACS 2016–2020 population.
- 7.2% of residents above 60 dB ranks #48 of 297 US cities — see the full measured ranking.
How Portland ranks
- Loudest of 4 Oregon cities in-state
- Louder: New York, NY #47
- Quieter: Downey, CA #49
How this map is made
This is a transparent aggregation of federal data, not an estimate: the BTS 2020 National Transportation Noise Map (road + rail + aviation) overlaid with Census ACS 2016–2020 population at tract level, clipped to the city boundary. Full methodology, limitations and the free CSV/JSON are on the US cities noise ranking. Remember what it doesn’t count: sirens, construction, nightlife and neighbors are outside the model.
How loud is your block?
The map shows averages by tract — your street is its own story. Measure it with the free online decibel meter → No install, nothing recorded.
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