Air Quality Risk Decision Tool

Turn Air Quality Index into Actionable Exposure Decisions with cigarette-equivalent framing

Translate AQI into practical risk, scenario guidance, and cigarette-equivalent exposure so you know what today's air means and what to do next.

What the current exposure means

AQI becomes PM2.5 dose, cigarette-equivalent framing, and category-based risk.

What action to take

See guidance for workouts, commuting, kids, windows open, and smoke days.

What to view next

Jump into AQI detail pages, city guides, methodology, and deeper blog resources.

Decision Tool

AQI to Cigarettes Calculator

Input the Air Quality Index (AQI) where you live and how many hours you've been exposed. The calculator will tell you what the impact to your health is in cigarettes.

Understand the number

Turn a raw AQI reading into a particle dose you can picture.

Decide what to do

Get scenario guidance for commuting, exercise, kids, and windows.

Reuse and share it

Save recent checks and copy result URLs for later decisions.

Enter a US-style AQI value between 0 and 500.

Quick scenario presets

Recent checks

Saved results appear here after you calculate.

Start with a real AQI reading

The result panel will translate it into cigarette-equivalent exposure, action guidance, and common-scenario decisions.

How the estimate works

Step 1: I converted AQI back to PM 2.5 particle concentration. That's the number of particles in the air that are a certain size. For this operation I used the same equation as the Air Now calculator.

Step 2: based on this research, the health impact of a particle concentration of 22μg/m3 per 24 hours is equivalent to about 1 cigarette.

This tool is a decision aid, not a medical diagnosis. It is most useful for comparing exposure levels, planning protective steps, and seeing how repeated days can add up.

1. Interpret

Make the AQI number understandable

Use cigarette-equivalent framing, PM2.5 estimates, and all-day exposure comparisons to understand whether this is background noise or a day-changing risk.

2. Decide

Choose the right action for the situation

The tool turns one reading into commute, exercise, kids, and indoor-air decisions instead of leaving you with a raw score and guesswork.

3. Revisit

Build repeat-use habits

Save common scenarios, share result URLs, and jump into city, scenario, and comparison pages when the same air-quality problems return.

Scenario Guides

Start from the decision you actually need to make

These pages are designed for repeat visits when the same question keeps coming back: commute, school, exercise, or smoke response.

Browse all scenarios

Credibility

Why this estimate is worth using

The calculator converts AQI back to PM2.5 using EPA-style AQI breakpoints, then uses the Berkeley Earth cigarette-equivalent framing to make exposure easier to understand.

We treat this as a decision aid, not a medical diagnosis. That means the output is built to help you compare doses, plan behavior, and decide what to check next.

Methodology and update policy are documented so users and search engines can see how the site is maintained.

City Guides

Programmatic pages with practical value

These city pages do not pretend to offer live data. They help people interpret readings they already have and connect them to the local decisions they tend to face repeatedly.

Browse city guides

Continue Exploring

Related reading that supports the next decision

Visit the blog

FAQs

Common questions about the AQI to Cigarettes calculator

AQI (Air Quality Index) is a standardized measurement used globally to report air quality. It takes into account various pollutants including PM2.5, PM10, ozone, and others to give a single value representing overall air quality.

The conversion is based on Berkeley Earth research that found breathing air pollution in heavily polluted cities has similar health impacts to smoking cigarettes. The calculation specifically looks at PM2.5 levels and their equivalent cigarette exposure.

The calculation is based on peer-reviewed research from Berkeley Earth, but it's important to note that it's an approximation to help understand air pollution's health impact. Individual health effects can vary based on many factors.

According to the EPA, AQI values of 0-50 are considered 'Good', 51-100 are 'Moderate', and anything above 100 is considered unhealthy for sensitive groups or worse. The lower the AQI, the better the air quality.

It's recommended to check your local AQI daily, especially if you live in an area prone to air pollution or if you have respiratory sensitivities. Air quality can vary significantly throughout the day.

During high AQI periods, stay indoors when possible, use air purifiers, wear appropriate masks when outdoors, and avoid strenuous outdoor activities. Keep windows closed when outdoor air quality is poor.

You can find your local AQI through various weather apps, government environmental websites, or dedicated air quality monitoring services. Many smartphones now include air quality information in their weather widgets.

This calculator provides an evidence-based approximation based on scientific research. While the exact health impact may vary by individual, it offers a useful way to understand air pollution's health effects in relatable terms.

Acknowledgments

This project was inspired by the AQI2cigarettes project. Special thanks to jasminedevv for the pioneering work.
AQI to Cigarettes Calculator | Air Quality Risk Decision Tool