County noise profile

Traffic noise in San Diego County, CA

Built from the US DOT National Transportation Noise Map (2020, 30-metre modeling grid, tract aggregation per Seto & Huang 2023) — the same public dataset used in the economics literature on what noise does to home values.

Average transportation noise (population-weighted)

45.8 dB

Residents above 60 dB

6%

Residents above 70 dB

2%

Population covered

3,323,970

Census tracts analyzed

736

Median home value

$914,700

What noise costs here

Estimated capitalized cost per median home

$4,171$9,733

Homebuyers pay a measurable premium for quiet. Using quasi-experimental evidence from highway noise-barrier construction, Moretti & Wheeler (2025) find prices rise 6.8% within 100 metres of new barriers — roughly 0.95% of home value per decibel of abatement. Applied to this county's average exposure of 45.8 dB and median home value of $914,700, the mid-range estimate is $6,952 (0.8% of value) — a stylized $2,781 per resident.

This is a research-based range, not a prediction of any specific property's value change. Source: NBER Working Paper 34298 (Moretti & Wheeler, 2025). Exposure varies street by street — averages hide the difference between a cul-de-sac and a frontage road.

Noise is one factor. A site decision needs all of them.

Our reports combine street-level noise exposure with demographics, traffic volumes, safety, schools, home values, and brand fit — every figure cited to its public source.

See report pricing

Data sources:US DOT/BTS National Transportation Noise Map (2020; all transportation modes; public domain), tract aggregation per Seto & Huang (2023); US Census Bureau ACS (median home values); NBER Working Paper 34298 (Moretti & Wheeler, 2025) for the capitalization methodology. Learn our methodology. Generated 2026-07-07.