SafeStreets - Free Walkability Score for Any Address
SafeStreets is a free, no-sign-up tool by Streets & Commons that analyzes the walkability of any address worldwide and returns a composite score (0-10) with tier labels, persona-specific verdicts, and neighborhood intelligence. It uses satellite imagery (Sentinel-2), OpenStreetMap, and government data sources including EPA, US Census, CDC PLACES, and FEMA.
How It Works
Enter any address and get an instant walkability score from 0 to 10. Scores fall into five tiers: Walkable (8.0-10.0), Moderate (6.5-7.9), Car-adjacent (5.0-6.4), Car-dependent (3.5-4.9), and Hostile (below 3.5). The composite score combines four weighted components: Daily Reach (50%), Street Safety (20%), Transit Reach (15%), and Walking Comfort (15%).
PersonaCards
SafeStreets answers three real-life questions with Yes, Borderline, or Unlikely verdicts: Can I go car-free here? Is it safe for kids to walk? Is it good for aging in place? Each verdict includes a plain-language explanation computed from relevant sub-scores.
15-Minute City Analysis
The Daily Reach component (50% of the composite) scores walking access to seven service categories within 15 minutes: grocery, healthcare, education, recreation, dining, shopping, and civic. Each category is scored individually with a composite access score. Works worldwide using OpenStreetMap data.
Neighborhood Intelligence (US Addresses)
US addresses receive enhanced data: commute mode patterns from Census ACS, CDC health outcomes (obesity, diabetes, asthma rates vs US average by neighborhood), FEMA flood zone classification, and terrain slope analysis via NASADEM for ADA accessibility.
Data Sources
- Sentinel-2 (ESA, 10m resolution) - Tree canopy, vegetation, urban heat
- OpenStreetMap - Street network, sidewalks, crossings, transit, amenities
- EPA National Walkability Index - Intersection density, transit access, land use mix
- US Census ACS - Commute mode split, demographics, income
- CDC PLACES - Health outcomes by neighborhood
- FEMA NFHL - Flood zone classification
- NASADEM - Terrain slope and ADA accessibility
- Open-Meteo CAMS - Real-time air quality (PM2.5, AQI) and heat stress modifier
- Transitland GTFS - Transit stop and route data
Features
- Free walkability score (0-10) for any address worldwide, no sign-up
- PersonaCards: car-free, kid safety, aging-in-place verdicts
- 15-Minute City Analysis with walk-time scoring
- Street Network Analysis: connectivity, intersection density, pedestrian paths
- 12 scored walkability metrics with expandable detail
- Compare Mode: side-by-side comparison of up to 4 addresses
- Moving Research ($49): school route safety, commute analysis, car-free savings, PDF reports
- Works in 190+ countries
Pricing
- Core walkability tool: Free, no sign-up, no usage limits
- Moving Research (for families and relocators): $49 one-time - school route safety, commute analysis, car-free savings, unlimited saved addresses, PDF reports. Works for every address, forever.
- SafeStreets Intelligence Platform: Custom pricing for organizations
Common Questions
Is SafeStreets really free? Yes. All core features are completely free with no sign-up required. Works in 190+ countries with unlimited searches.
Does it work outside the US? Yes. Walkability analysis works globally using Sentinel-2 and OpenStreetMap. US-specific features (Census, CDC, FEMA) are only available for US addresses.
What is a 15-minute city score? It measures whether grocery, school, park, pharmacy, transit, and restaurant are within a 15-minute walk from the address.
City Walkability Guides
Explore walkability scores for major US cities: New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, Portland, Seattle, Washington DC, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Denver, Minneapolis, Miami, Austin, Atlanta, Nashville, Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Detroit, Pittsburgh.
Built by Streets & Commons - Open data tools for urban walkability, pedestrian safety, and neighborhood intelligence.