Air Quality Rankings for Kansas (2026)
Kansas has 11 cities tracked by EPA air-quality monitors, with a state-wide 5-year median AQI of 38 — 3 points cleaner than the national average of AQI 41. Ford, Kansas ranks #1 with the cleanest air (AQI 15, Grade B), while Wyandotte, Kansas sits at the bottom (AQI 50, Grade C).
How Kansas Compares
Kansas has 11 cities tracked by EPA air-quality monitors, with a state-wide 5-year median AQI of 38 — 3 points cleaner than the national average of AQI 41. Ford, Kansas ranks #1 with the cleanest air (AQI 15, Grade B), while Wyandotte, Kansas sits at the bottom (AQI 50, Grade C). The rankings below are computed from the EPA Air Quality System (AQS), which aggregates daily AQI readings from federally certified monitors into annual averages. Cities are sorted by 5-year median AQI (lowest = cleanest = #1). The 5-year window smooths out year-to-year volatility from weather and wildfire events.
Kansas is bucking the national trend of broad improvement: 8 of 11 monitored cities show measurably worse air over the past decade, more than the 1 that are improving. Across western states this usually traces back to expanding wildfire smoke exposure; elsewhere it can reflect rising local emissions from population or freight growth.
The dominant pollutant across 6 of 11 Kansas cities is Ground-Level Ozone. Ground-level ozone forms when sunlight reacts with vehicle and industrial emissions. It is worst on hot, sunny, stagnant summer days and is the leading air quality concern across much of the Sun Belt and California. Other Kansas cities report Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) (3), Coarse Particulate Matter (PM10) (2) as their dominant concern.
The fastest-improving city in Kansas is Chase, Kansas, with median AQI falling by 0.3 points per year. Steady improvement at that pace usually reflects fleet turnover (older diesels retiring), upwind power-plant retirements, or tighter regional emissions controls.
The city with the steepest decline is Neosho, Kansas, where median AQI is rising by 1.8 points per year. Rapid deterioration in a single city usually points to either wildfire-smoke exposure (in the West) or a new local emissions source — a power plant, port, or freight corridor coming online.
Full Kansas Ranking
| # | City | 5yr Avg AQI | Current AQI | Worst Pollutant | Trend | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ford, Kansas | 15 | 15 | PM10 | Worsening | B |
| 2 | Sherman, Kansas | 16 | 19 | PM10 | Stable | B |
| 3 | Chase, Kansas | 26 | 29 | PM2.5 | Stable | B |
| 4 | Leavenworth, Kansas | 35 | 37 | Ozone | Stable | B |
| 5 | Trego, Kansas | 41 | 47 | Ozone | Worsening | C |
| 6 | Johnson, Kansas | 44 | 49 | Ozone | Worsening | C |
| 7 | Sedgwick, Kansas | 45 | 48 | Ozone | Worsening | C |
| 8 | Shawnee, Kansas | 46 | 48 | PM2.5 | Worsening | C |
| 9 | Sumner, Kansas | 47 | 51 | Ozone | Worsening | C |
| 10 | Neosho, Kansas | 48 | 54 | Ozone | Worsening | D |
| 11 | Wyandotte, Kansas | 50 | 51 | PM2.5 | Stable | C |
Air quality data for Kansas is sourced from the EPA Air Quality System (AQS), which monitors outdoor air quality at thousands of stations nationwide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ford, Kansas has the best air quality in Kansas with a 5-year average AQI of 15 and a Grade B (74/100). Its dominant pollutant is Coarse Particulate Matter (PM10) and the long-run trend is worsening.
Wyandotte, Kansas has the worst air quality in Kansas with a 5-year average AQI of 50 and a Grade C (57/100). Its dominant pollutant is Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5).
Kansas has 11 cities with EPA air quality monitoring data, covering 2014-2023 of daily AQI measurements aggregated into annual averages.
Kansas's state-wide 5-year median AQI is 38, 3 points cleaner than the national average of AQI 41. Kansas is bucking the national trend of broad improvement: 8 of 11 monitored cities show measurably worse air over the past decade, more than the 1 that are improving. Across western states this usually traces back to expanding wildfire smoke exposure; elsewhere it can reflect rising local emissions from population or freight growth.
Ground-Level Ozone is the dominant pollutant in 6 of 11 monitored Kansas cities. Ground-level ozone forms when sunlight reacts with vehicle and industrial emissions. It is worst on hot, sunny, stagnant summer days and is the leading air quality concern across much of the Sun Belt and California.
Kansas cities log an average of 3 days per year at "Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups" or worse, based on EPA monitor data over the last five years. Across all 11 Kansas cities tracked, that totals 140 unhealthy days over the period.
Cities ranked by 5-year average AQI (lower is better). Grades factor in average AQI, trend direction, unhealthy days, and dominant pollutant.
The this entity category groups every U.S. air quality and pollution monitoring entity sharing this attribute. The list above is the data; the paragraphs below explain what the grouping means against the broader the EPA Air Quality System (AQS) distribution and how to read the relative rankings within the category.
For readers using this category as a starting point, the per-entity detail pages linked from the table above carry the underlying the EPA Air Quality System (AQS) data in full. The category-level view is the filter; the per-entity pages are the actual answer.
Source: EPA Outdoor Air Quality Data, 2026.