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  • Site Camera Feed at

  • Site Camera Feed at

  • data over the last 48 hours in table format

    Data not available

  • Where does this data come from?

    EPA has monitoring sites in population centres around Victoria.

    Most of our air monitoring sites are next to roads. This is because most Victorians live and work close to roads.

    EPA and VICSES can also deploy equipment to monitor air quality nearby an incident like a fire.

    We also collect data from a citizen science project. The Inner Melbourne Air Monitoring project sees citizen scientists working with us to help build an understanding of air pollution impacts.

    The air quality where you are might be different to what you see on EPA AirWatch, even if there’s a monitoring site close to you. This is because there are many factors that can affect air quality. For example, wind direction and smoke from wood fires.

Google Map Pins.

Google Map

Air quality 
around Victoria

This interactive map lets you see air quality around Victoria. Refer to air quality categories to find more information.

Note that Kingsville and Spotswood are temporary air monitoring sites that are part of a citizen science project.

Types of monitoring sites

  • Standard monitoring sites

  • Incident monitoring sites

  • Sensor/camera monitoring sites

  • Good
  • Fair
  • Poor
  • Very poor
  • Extremely poor
  • No Data
View data in table format

More details

  • Disclaimer

    Data on EPA AirWatch comes directly from our air monitoring stations using various types of monitoring equipment and methods. This data may be adjusted later according to set criteria to account for instrument errors, power interruptions and other technical issues.

    EPA aims to locate our ambient monitoring stations so they give a good representation of the air quality experienced by the public. As most of the Victorian population lives and works close to roads, most of our stations are in population centres next to roads. This can mean we do not always comply with one of the requirements of the Australian Standard for siting (AS 3580.1.1), which specifies that air monitoring stations should be more than 50 metres away from a road.

    Read more about our National Association of Testing Authorities (NATA) accreditation.

  • Check the air monitoring network status

    AirWatch: Multiple air monitoring sites are offline due to communications technical difficulties and data is not being collected. EPA technicians are working to fix the problem. (04 November 2024)

    AltonaMonitoring for PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide is offline due to technical difficulties and PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide data is not being collected at this site. EPA technicians are working to fix the problem. (04 November 2024)

    Dandenong: Monitoring for nitrogen dioxide is offline due to technical difficulties and nitrogen dioxide data is not being collected at this site. EPA technicians are working to fix the problem. (31 October 2024)

    Footscray: Air monitoring site is being relocated nearby. Until the new site is established limited air monitoring information for Footscray will be displayed on AirWatch. Air quality information for Altona is available on the AirWatch website (27 June 2023)

  • Connect to our developer portal

    Are you a developer looking to connect to our application program interface (API)?

    Our developer portal lets developers explore the APIs published by EPA Victoria. Just sign up, subscribe to a product and you are all set to access the APIs associated with that product!

    Connect to our developer portal.

  • Access historic data

    Historical hourly air quality data is available at data.vic.gov.au. Files for each year are uploaded once data validation is complete.  To request data not yet available on data.vic.gov.au, please contact EPA with the details of your request.