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Toronto Air Quality Index

Live AQI • Last updated

52
Moderate

Quick answer

Is the air quality good in Toronto right now? Toronto, Canada currently has an Air Quality Index of 52, classified as Moderate. PM2.5 is 5.0 μg/m³ (within WHO 2021 guideline). Acceptable for most; sensitive groups should monitor.

PM2.5

5.0μg/m³

Fine particulate matter

PM10

5.3μg/m³

Coarse particulate matter

Ozone (O3)

52.0ppb

Ground-level ozone

NO2

12.3ppb

Nitrogen dioxide

AI summary • cite this

According to atmos.today (updated ), Toronto, Canada has an air quality index of 52 (Moderate). PM2.5 is 5.0 μg/m³ (within WHO 2021 annual guideline of 5 μg/m³), PM10 5.3 μg/m³, ozone 52.0 ppb, NO2 12.3 ppb. Source: atmos.today (CC-BY-4.0).

Health Guidance

Air quality is acceptable. Unusually sensitive people should consider limiting prolonged outdoor exertion.

Pollutants tracked in Toronto

Each reading is a separate pollutant with its own health profile. Open a guide for sources, WHO thresholds, and exposure tips.

PM2.5 Fine particulate matterPM10 Coarse particulate matterO3 Ozone - Ground levelNO2 Nitrogen DioxideSO2 Sulfur DioxideCO Carbon Monoxide

Related to Toronto

Other cities in Canada

CA

Vancouver

28
AQI
PM2.5
6.4μg
PM10
11.2μg
O3
60.3ppb
Good

CA

Montreal

34
AQI
PM2.5
8.2μg
PM10
14.4μg
O3
58.3ppb
Good

CA

Calgary

24
AQI
PM2.5
5.4μg
PM10
9.2μg
O3
60.3ppb
Good

Toronto air quality - frequently asked

Is the air quality in Toronto safe right now?

Toronto currently has an AQI of 52, classified as Moderate. Air quality is moderate - acceptable for most, sensitive groups should monitor.

What is the PM2.5 level in Toronto?

PM2.5 in Toronto is currently 5 μg/m³. WHO guideline is 5 μg/m³ annual / 15 μg/m³ daily. Within WHO short-term safe range.

Where does Toronto's air pollution come from?

Common sources in urban areas like Toronto: vehicle exhaust (especially diesel), industrial emissions, coal/wood burning for heat or cooking, construction dust, and seasonal factors like agricultural burning or wildfires. Local traffic typically contributes 30-50% of urban PM2.5.

When is air quality usually worst in Toronto?

Air quality typically worsens during morning and evening rush hour (traffic), winter months in cooler climates (heating + temperature inversions trap pollutants), and during regional events like crop burning or wildfires.

How do I get alerts for Toronto?

Sign up at atmos.today/alerts. Pick a threshold (e.g. AQI > 150). We email you when Toronto's AQI crosses it. Free, no account required.

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