The 35 Least-Walkable Cities in America

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chuyuss / Shutterstock.com

As the real estate market changes to keep up with buyers’ needs, “walkability” — a term describing how easily residents can walk to and from home, work, school, errands, restaurants and entertainment — becomes ever more attractive.

Walk Score is a business that measures and scores the walkability of an address, a neighborhood or a city. Type any address into Walk Score to see its walkability score. Walkability is so hot that online real-estate market Zillow includes a Walk Score in its property listings, and sellers of homes often tout their properties’ walkable features.

Here are the 35 least-walkable American cities with populations over 200,000, with their Walk Score ratings and population numbers. Although these towns have the worst track records for walkability, many are working to improve.

For the flip side of this story, read “The 35 Most Walkable Cities in America.”

35. Tulsa, Oklahoma

digidreamgrafix / Shutterstock.com
digidreamgrafix / Shutterstock.com

A national poll of 3,000 adults in the 50 biggest U.S. metros underscores that, more than any other generation, millennial renters and homebuyers look for walkability in an address, says the National Association of Realtors’ 2015 Community Preference Survey.

Tulsa has the dubious honor of being the best of the 35 worst cities when it comes to walkability, according to Walk Score.

Walk Score: 38.6

Population: 391,906

34. Lubbock, Texas

T photography / Shutterstock.com
T photography / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score arrives at its scores by analyzing data such as block length and distance to amenities.

Walk Score: 37.5

Population: 229,573

33. Reno, Nevada

Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock.com
Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock.com

A higher Walk Score means better health for residents. Researchers writing in the Journal of the American Planning Association found that in neighborhoods where people can walk a lot, residents are less obese and more active, and are exposed to lower levels of nitrogen dioxide and other traffic-related health hazards.

Walk Score: 37.2

Population: 225,221

32. San Antonio, Texas

Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 36.5

Population: 1,327,407

31. Arlington, Texas

Katherine Welles / Shutterstock.com
Katherine Welles / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 36.4

Population: 365,438

Globe Life Park in Arlington, above, is home to the Texas Rangers baseball franchise.

Properties in a walkable neighborhood are usually more expensive. Brookings Institution researchers Christopher Leinberger and Mariela Alfonzo studied five categories of Washington, D.C., neighborhoods for walkability and cost. They found that moving from a non-walkable address to one that’s slightly better will cost you $301.76 a month more in rent for a similar apartment. If you move from one home in the exurbs to a similar home that is primo territory for walking, you’ll pay $1,200 more a month, according to a report on their findings in The Atlantic’s CityLab.

30. Bakersfield, California

Richard Thornton / Shutterstock.com
Richard Thornton / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 36.3

Population: 347,483

29. Mesa, Arizona

Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com
Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com

Cities built for quick and easy movement of traffic — using a grid of long blocks and broad boulevards — made sense in the 1950s and ’60s, when the Phoenix suburb of Mesa was growing fast. But a layout like this discourages walking.

Walk Score: 36.2

Population: 439,041

28. Memphis, Tennessee

photosounds / Shutterstock.com
photosounds / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 36.1

Population: 646,889

27. Birmingham, Alabama

Rob Hainer / Shutterstock.com
Rob Hainer / Shutterstock.com

Younger buyers aren’t the only ones who want walkability in an address. Buyers and renters of all generations look for it. Women, particularly, value walkability: 61 percent of the women surveyed in the National Association of Realtors’ 2015 National Community and Transportation Preference Survey said that it was “very important” to live in a community with sidewalks, and stores and restaurants to which they could walk.

Walk Score: 34.8

Population: 212,237

26. Colorado Springs, Colorado

photo.ua / Shutterstock.com
photo.ua / Shutterstock.com

Colorado Springs’ low Walk Score is “probably not surprising to those who already live here and know how spread out the city is,” Realtor Amanda Luciano writes of her city.

“The good news,” she adds, “is that the few walkable neighborhoods in Colorado Springs are great places to live and most have fantastic architectural character.” Her favorite neighborhoods for walkability include Downtown, Old Colorado City and Manitou Springs, among many others.

Walk Score: 34.5

Population: 416,427

25. Lexington-Fayette, Kentucky

Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com
Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 34.3

Population: 295,803

24. Wichita, Kansas

mojoeks / Shutterstock.com
mojoeks / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 34.3

Population: 382,368

23. Fort Worth, Texas

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bobcooltx / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 34

Population: 741,206

22. Kansas City, Missouri

TommyBrison / Shutterstock.com
TommyBrison / Shutterstock.com

Are you hoping to improve walkability in your city? Check out Kansas City, Missouri’s walkability survey, used by the city’s community development department to poll residents about where they already walk now and where they wish to walk more often.

Walk Score: 33.7

Population: 459,787

21. North Las Vegas, Nevada

Wollertz / Shutterstock.com
Wollertz / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 33

Population: 216,961

20. Chandler, Arizona

Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com
Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 32.9

Population: 236,123

19. Louisville-Jefferson, Kentucky

Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com
Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 32.9

Population: 597,337

18. Virginia Beach, Virginia

J. Bicking / Shutterstock.com
J. Bicking / Shutterstock.com

“Virginia Beach’s resort area contains 40 blocks of fashion, art, crafts and great food, all easily walkable,” according to the state’s official tourism website sporting the state slogan, “Virginia Is for Lovers.”

Walk Score: 32.5

Population: 437,994

17. Anchorage, Alaska

akphotoc / Shutterstock.com
akphotoc / Shutterstock.com

The Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Alliance for Biking & Walking says Alaska — along with Oregon, Montana, New York and Vermont — has a notably large percentage of workers who walk or bike to work. In Alaska, 5.5 percent to 9 percent of commuters get to work on foot or by bike.

Walk Score: 32.3

Population: 291,826

16. Oklahoma City

Jeffrey M. Frank / Shutterstock.com
Jeffrey M. Frank / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 32.1

Population: 579,999

15. Scottsdale, Arizona

Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com
Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 31.7

Population: 217,385

14. Raleigh, North Carolina

John Wollwerth / Shutterstock.com
John Wollwerth / Shutterstock.com

Although walkable neighborhoods are usually the more expensive ones, lower-income commuters make up a bigger share of those in a community who walk and take public transit to get to work.

According to the Alliance for Biking & Walking:

On average, people of low income represent 14 percent of the commuter population, but are 31 percent of commuters who walk to work and 22 percent of commuters who take transit to work. The trips low-income households make by walking or biking are more likely to be for daily errands, work, school, or church than for social or recreational purposes.

Walk Score: 29.9

Population: 403,892

13. Henderson, Nevada

Jennifer Agster / Shutterstock.com
Jennifer Agster / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 29.2

Population: 257,729

12. Indianapolis

f11photo / Shutterstock.com
f11photo / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 29.2

Population: 820,445

11. Fort Wayne, Indiana

Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com
Henryk Sadura / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 29.1

Population: 253,691

10. Gilbert, Arizona

Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com
Tim Roberts Photography / Shutterstock.com

Gilbert, Arizona, grew from a Wild West railway town to part of the fast-growing Phoenix metro area. Gilbert is bordered by Mesa (No. 29 least-walkable) and Chandler (No. 20 least-walkable). However, Allstate Insurance’s blog singles out downtown Gilbert and other Phoenix areas that buck the trend with better walkability, including central Phoenix and the city’s Encanto historic district, among others.

Walk Score: 28.8

Population: 208,453

9. Greensboro, North Carolina

Jon Bilous / Shutterstock.com
Jon Bilous / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 28.8

Population: 269,666

8. Durham, North Carolina

Transcendental Media / Shutterstock.com
Transcendental Media / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 28.4

Population: 228,330

7. Nashville-Davidson, Tennessee

f11photo / Shutterstock.com
f11photo / Shutterstock.com

Nashville’s millennial homebuyers demand walkability, writes The Tennessean. “The walkable community trend is one that began several years ago in Nashville, with the revitalization of areas like 12 South and the Gulch. More neighborhoods across Middle Tennessee are following suit, striving to create and provide as many walkable options for dining, shopping and entertainment.”

Walk Score: 27.9

Population: 601,222

6. Jacksonville, Florida

GagliardiImages / Shutterstock.com
GagliardiImages / Shutterstock.com

Walk Score: 26.3

Population: 821,784

5. Montgomery, Alabama

Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com

Cities and towns all around Alabama are building new sidewalks and trails, says AL.com, owned by Alabama Media Group. Improvements such as sidewalks, bike paths and trails are cheaper than building roads, says Tommy Battle, mayor of Huntsville.

Walk Score: 26.2

Population: 205,764

4. Charlotte, North Carolina

Serge Skiba / Shutterstock.com
Serge Skiba / Shutterstock.com

The Charlotte Observer recommends Plaza Midwood as one of Charlotte’s most walkable neighborhoods, “with vintage shops, galleries, bakeries, tattoo parlors, home décor stores, and music venues all within a few blocks.” Despite the city’s relatively low Walk Score, a recent survey by the Urban Land Institute’s Charlotte chapter finds that many residents enjoy the walking access where they live, the Observer writes.

Walk Score: 25.5

Population: 731,424

3. Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com
Sean Pavone / Shutterstock.com

This North Carolina town is a “hot” destination for retirees, according to Winston-Salem’s Fox 8 News. The county’s over-65 population grew 18 percent between 2000 and 2010.

Jason Thiel, president of the Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership, tells the station that easy access to local amenities “is important to everybody,” not just retirees:

They want walkability. More people want to live in a vibrant community than in a gated subdivision. They are interested in getting out of their cars.

Walk Score: 22.3

Population: 229,617

2. Chesapeake, Virginia

JoMo333 / Shutterstock.com
JoMo333 / Shutterstock.com

While being the second-least walkable city in the U.S. isn’t much of an honor, Chesapeake — located on the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway — has a lot going on: It is within easy reach of Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean and is a paradise for nature lovers and bird watchers because of its proximity to the Great Dismal Swamp and its National Wildlife Refuge, says TravelPulse, a travel-news publication.

Walk Score: 21

Population: 222,209

1. Fayetteville, North Carolina

GJones Creative / Shutterstock.com
GJones Creative / Shutterstock.com

Fayetteville is rated the country’s least walkable city, with a rock-bottom low Walk Score of 20.4 out of 100. But that might be changing. In 2012, 5.4 percent of Fayetteville’s commuters were getting to work on foot — up considerably from 2007, when just 1.7 percent commuted by walking, says Governing magazine.

Walk Score: 20.4

Population: 200,564

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