City in Arizona, United States

Tucson

$319kMedian Home
356Sunny Days/yr
84°FAvg High Temp
Loading Weather
View on MapPopulation532kElevation2,490 ft
Quick Read

Hot season is intense, with rain peaks in the cooler months. The hottest stretch is likely to shape daily routines. The air stays fairly dry through the year. Air quality can be a watchout.

Tucson is the county seat of and the most populated city in Pima County, Arizona, United States. It is the second-most populous city in Arizona with a population of 542,630 at the 2020 census, behind the capital city, Phoenix, while the Tucson metropolitan statistical area has an estimated 1.08 million residents and is the 52nd-largest metropolitan area in the United States. Tucson and Phoenix anchor the Arizona Sun Corridor. The city is 108 miles southeast of Phoenix and 60 mi (100 km) north of the United States–Mexico border. It is home to the University of Arizona.Wikipedia

Intense hot seasonNo real winterCool-season rain
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01

Where It Is

Location Context
Tucson, Arizona
Latitude32.22°
Longitude-110.93°
Population532k
Altitude2,490 ft

State Context

ArizonaU.S. state

Arizona is a landlocked state in the Southwestern United States, sharing the Four Corners region with Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. It also borders Nevada to the northwest and California to the west, and shares an international border with the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California to the south and southwest. Its capital and largest city is Phoenix, which is the most populous state capital and fifth-most populous city in the United States. Arizona is divided into 15 counties.Wikipedia

Income tax: Flat 2.50%Avg sales tax: 8.37%Property tax: 0.51%Official school data available

About the Region

Desert Southwest

The Desert Southwest — Arizona, Nevada, and New Mexico — shares a climate defined by heat, aridity, and extraordinary landscape. Phoenix has grown into one of the country's largest cities on the premise of air-conditioned suburban living, a bargain for decades that is being stress-tested by climate shifts pushing summer highs above 110°F and placing long-term water resources under pressure. Las Vegas offers Nevada's zero income tax and extraordinary entertainment infrastructure against the same water equation tied to a shrinking Colorado River.

Tucson, Albuquerque, and Santa Fe offer a different profile: human-scale cities with deep roots in Spanish colonial and Indigenous traditions, lower costs than their larger neighbors, and the landscape that draws artists, retirees, and outdoor enthusiasts. The region's sunlight is exceptional — Phoenix regularly exceeds 300 sunny days per year — and the cultural texture across New Mexico in particular is unlike anywhere else in the United States.

02

Nature Access

Nature & Park Feeds

Closest protected landscapes, reserves, and big park systems surfaced from the same nearby feeds used in compare.

Distances in miles
Federal park feed

National Parks

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OpenStreetMap feed

Local Nature & Reserves

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Sources: National Park Service and OpenStreetMap
03

City Profile

Urban Feel2,228/mi²residents
Median Age34 yrs
College Educated29%bachelor's or higher
Work From Home11%of workforce
Poverty Rate20%
04

Cost of Living

Housing
$1k/mo
Median rent
$319k
Median home price
Rent burden32% of income
Household Income
$52k
Median annual
05

Livability

Getting AroundMixed mobilityTransit helps
Best available read from walkability, transit, and density signals

Mixed day-to-day convenience, and transit is one of the stronger mobility signals here.

Safety Score
65
Walk Score
45
Transit Score
71
School Rating
7.8/10
Internet
Fiber
8%
Cable
94%
address availability
06

Climate

Sunshine
356
sunny days per year
98% of the year
Avg High Temp
84°F
annual average
Humidity Pattern
Dry air
34% warm season / 47% cool season
Comfort Score
66/100
Good
Temp Swing
38°F
seasonal high-temp spread
Rainfall
13"
inches per year
Snowfall
1"
inches per year
Air Quality
40
Good AQI
How To Read Comfort

Comfort combines temperature band fit, humidity fit, seasonal swing, and penalties for long stretches of extreme heat or cold. Higher scores mean the yearly pattern stays closer to an easier day-to-day climate band.

Monthly Temperature
Daylight Span (Sunrise to Sunset)
Precipitation Distribution
13" of rain per year
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Humidity Through The Year
Hover any month for the exact RH value. This is measuring monthly relative humidity, not dew point or current weather.
dry air much of the year
Summer 34% · Winter 47% · May-Jan 17-53%
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Hover a month for exact RH and seasonal context.
07

Natural Hazard Risk

Flood Risk
minimal
FEMA classification
Wildfire Risk
minimal
FEMA rating
Poor Air Days
23 days
per year with AQI > 100
08

Current Conditions

09

Sports Footprint

League Snapshot

A quick read on how big the sports footprint is here, without making you squint through tiny chips.

Minor League Clubs
Tucson Roadrunners
College Programs
Arizona Wildcats
10

Local Next Steps

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11

Keep Exploring

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