Mapped: The U.S. Cities at Risk of Sinking

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Mapped: The U.S. Cities at Risk of Sinking

   

Key Takeaways

  • 25 out of the top 28 major U.S. cities are experiencing land subsidence, creating hidden but growing property risk.
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  • Houston, Fort Worth, Dallas, New York, and Chicago are all sinking at a rate of over 2 mm per year.
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  • Even slow, millimeter scale sinking can drive long term infrastructure damage and insurability challenges.
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Across the United States, the ground beneath many major cities is gradually subsiding. Research published in Nature Cities shows that 25 of the 28 largest U.S. urban areas are sinking, a trend with serious implications for infrastructure durability, flood risk, and long-term resilience.

Created in partnership with Inigo, this visualization maps the major U.S. cities most at risk of sinking.

Why U.S. Cities Are Slowly Sinking

In coastal cities such as San Diego and New York, subsidence amplifies sea level rise and leaves communities more exposed to storm surge and tidal flooding. Inland cities face different pressures. In places like Houston, Phoenix, and Denver, groundwater extraction and soil compaction accelerate vertical land movement.

Because subsidence happens gradually, it often goes unnoticed. Still, Houston, Fort Worth, Dallas, New York, and Chicago are all sinking by more than 2.0 mm per year. Even small drops in elevation can strain pipelines, damage roads, and weaken building foundations.

City State Vertical land movement (mm/year)
Houston Texas -5.2
Fort Worth Texas -4.4
Dallas Texas -3.8
New York New York -2.4
Chicago Illinois -2.3
Columbus Ohio -1.9
Seattle Washington -1.8
Detroit Michigan -1.7
Denver Colorado -1.7
Charlotte North Carolina -1.5
Indianapolis Indiana -1.4
Washington District of Columbia -1.3
Oklahoma City Oklahoma -1.3
Nashville Tennessee -1.1
San Antonio Texas -1.1
San Diego California -1.1
Portland Oregon -0.9
San Francisco California -0.9
Phoenix Arizona -0.8
Las Vegas Nevada -0.8
Austin Texas -0.8
El Paso Texas -0.8
Philadelphia Pennsylvania -0.7
Los Angeles California -0.7
Boston Massachusetts -0.5

Many other major cities, including Seattle, Detroit, and Denver, are sinking at rates between 1.5 and 2.0 mm per year.

A Growing Blind Spot in Property Risk

Although subtle, subsidence affects millions of people and tens of thousands of buildings, many of which sit in high damage risk zones. As elevation changes accumulate, mitigation and adaptation costs rise, often after damage has already occurred.

For property risk professionals, this data highlights an important reality. Climate risk does not move in only one direction. In some cities, the threat is not just rising water levels, but the ground itself sinking beneath critical infrastructure and assets.

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