Air Quality in Kansas
Kansas earns an average Air Quality Grade of B, with a 5-year median AQI of 38 across 11 monitored areas — 3 points below the national average of 41.
See full Kansas air quality rankings →Understanding Air Quality in Kansas
Kansas earns an average Air Quality Grade of B, with a 5-year median AQI of 38 across 11 monitored areas — 3 points below the national average of 41. The grade combines four signals — 5-year median AQI, 10-year trend direction, count of unhealthy days per year, and dominant pollutant — into a single A-F score. Kansas's 11 monitored areas collectively logged 140 days at "Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups" or worse over the last five years.
Kansas is bucking the national trend of broad improvement: 8 of 11 monitored areas are showing measurably worse air over the past decade, more than the 1 that are improving. Across the western U.S. that pattern 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 areas 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. Ozone irritates the lungs and triggers asthma — even healthy adults can feel it after exercising on high-ozone days. Other monitored areas in the state report Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) (3), Coarse Particulate Matter (PM10) (2) as their dominant pollutant.
Within Kansas, the gap between best and worst is meaningful: Sherman, Kansas tops the state with a Grade B and 5-year median AQI of 16, while Neosho, Kansas sits at the bottom with a Grade D and 5-year median AQI of 48. Local terrain, prevailing winds, and proximity to industrial or wildfire emission sources drive most of that within-state variation.
Chase, Kansas is the fastest-improving area in Kansas, with median AQI falling by 0.3 points per year over the EPA reporting period. Steady improvement at that pace usually reflects fleet turnover (older diesels retiring), upwind power-plant retirements, and tighter local emissions controls.
Grade Distribution Across Kansas
Of 11 Kansas monitored areas, 4 earn a top grade (A or B), 6 sit in the middle (C), and 1 falls below average (D or F).
All Monitored Areas in Kansas
Sherman, Kansas
Sherman County · AQI 16 (5yr avg) · Stable · PM10
Ford, Kansas
Ford County · AQI 15 (5yr avg) · Worsening · PM10
Chase, Kansas
Chase County · AQI 26 (5yr avg) · Stable · PM2.5
Leavenworth, Kansas
Leavenworth County · AQI 35 (5yr avg) · Stable · Ozone
Trego, Kansas
Trego County · AQI 41 (5yr avg) · Worsening · Ozone
Sedgwick, Kansas
Sedgwick County · AQI 45 (5yr avg) · Worsening · Ozone
Wyandotte, Kansas
Wyandotte County · AQI 50 (5yr avg) · Stable · PM2.5
Johnson, Kansas
Johnson County · AQI 44 (5yr avg) · Worsening · Ozone
Shawnee, Kansas
Shawnee County · AQI 46 (5yr avg) · Worsening · PM2.5
Sumner, Kansas
Sumner County · AQI 47 (5yr avg) · Worsening · Ozone
Neosho, Kansas
Neosho County · AQI 48 (5yr avg) · Worsening · Ozone
Frequently Asked Questions
Kansas has 11 monitored areas with a 5-year median AQI of 38 and an average Air Quality Grade of B. The dominant pollutant across the state is Ground-Level Ozone. 1 cities are improving, 8 are worsening, and 2 are stable.
Sherman, Kansas has the best Air Quality Grade (B, score 77/100) in Kansas with a 5-year median AQI of 16. Its dominant pollutant is Coarse Particulate Matter (PM10), and the long-run trend is stable.
Neosho, Kansas has the lowest Air Quality Grade (D, score 48/100) in Kansas with a 5-year median AQI of 48. Its dominant pollutant is Ground-Level Ozone.
Of 11 monitored areas in Kansas, 1 are showing improving trends, 8 are worsening, and 2 remain stable over the past decade. Chase, Kansas is the fastest-improving area in the state, with median AQI dropping by 0.3 points per year.
Ground-Level Ozone is the dominant pollutant in 6 of 11 Kansas monitored areas. Ground-level ozone forms when sunlight reacts with vehicle and industrial emissions. It is worst on hot, sunny, stagnant summer days. Ozone irritates the lungs and triggers asthma — even healthy adults can feel it after exercising on high-ozone days.
The this entity record above pulls directly from the EPA Air Quality System (AQS). What follows is the per-entity context — how this entity sits in the broader U.S. air quality and pollution monitoring distribution and which underlying factors drive the headline numbers.
The methodology behind every numeric value on this page is publicly documented on the the EPA Air Quality System (AQS) portal and described in detail on this site’s methodology page. Refresh cadence varies by underlying series; the page surfaces the as-of date for each number so readers can trace any figure back to the source release.
For readers using this page as a decision input, the related-entity pages elsewhere on the site provide the comparison set. The most useful comparison for this entity is typically a peer within U.S. counties and states with similar size, similar exposure, or similar geography — not the national-level summary alone.
Source: EPA Outdoor Air Quality Data, 2026.