
Published
26 minutes ago
on
February 20, 2026
| 2,004 views
-->
By
Julia Wendling
Graphics & Design
- Athul Alexander

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.
- Houston, Fort Worth, Dallas, New York, and Chicago are all sinking at a rate of over 2 mm per year.
- Even slow, millimeter scale sinking can drive long term infrastructure damage and insurability challenges.
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.

Explore the data behind emerging global property risks.
You may also like
-

Real Estate19 hours ago
Charted: The Escalating Destruction of U.S. Wildfires
Wildfires in the United States are becoming more destructive, with many of the most severe seasons occurring in the past decade.
-

Real Estate2 days ago
Mapped: The U.S. States Building the Most Homes in the Fire Line
As housing spreads into the fire line, exposure is rising sharply, compounding loss potential and challenging long-term insurability.
-

Real Estate3 days ago
4 Inputs Driving the Rising Cost of Rebuilding
Rising labor and material costs mean every insured dollar now rebuilds less, widening the recovery gap after disasters across the United States.
-

Real Estate6 days ago
How Do Interest Rates Impact the Real Estate Market?
Lower interest rates have often supported stronger real estate returns and improved valuations. Will that trend return in 2026?
-

Real Estate1 week ago
6 Trends Reshaping U.S. Property Insurance
From climate volatility to economic and technological shifts, a wide range of forces are reshaping property risk in the U.S.
-

Environment4 months ago
Ranked: The 10 Most Powerful U.S. Hurricanes (1900-2025)
Hurricanes are a defining force in the U.S. climate, capable of leaving behind profound environmental, social, and economic devastation.
-

Environment5 months ago
Mapped: Which U.S. Cities Saw Record-Breaking Temperatures in 2024?
Global temperatures are climbing—but how is this trend playing out across the United States, and which regions are being hit the hardest?
-

Environment6 months ago
Ranked: The Most Expensive U.S. Wildfire Events, So Far
Wildfire events are growing increasingly frequent and destructive around the world as human-driven climate impacts continue to escalate.
-

Environment6 months ago
Mapped: The United States of Drought
Drought grips much of the U.S., affecting over 60 million people today.
-

Healthcare7 months ago
The $58B Weight Loss Drug Market in One Chart
Weight loss drugs have surged in popularity in recent years, transforming the pharmaceutical landscape. Which brands are dominating this space?
-

Healthcare7 months ago
Ranked: Which Areas Receive the Most Pharma R&D?
The pharmaceutical industry has made enormous strides in treating—and even curing—a wide range of diseases and conditions. Which areas are seeing the most R&D in 2025?
-

Healthcare7 months ago
The $5.6T Pharmaceutical Industry in One Chart
Pharma giants don’t just make medicine—they shape the future of healthcare. Who are the world’s major players?
-

Crime7 months ago
6 Fraud Trends Reshaping Risk in 2025
The fraud and financial crime landscapes are evolving rapidly. What are the key threats shaping risk in 2025?
-

Cryptocurrency7 months ago
Ranked: The 10 Biggest Digital Heists
Some of the largest digital heists didn’t rely on brute-force hacking, they exploited the weakest link in security: human trust.
-

Crime8 months ago
The Most Costly Financial Crimes in 2024
As cybersecurity threats escalate, which financial crimes are causing the most harm? The FBI has the data.
-

Crime8 months ago
Mapped: U.S. Financial Crime Activity by State
Suspicious activity has been rising in the U.S., but is it spread evenly throughout all 50 states? Certainly not.
-

Crime8 months ago
Ranked: America’s Most Common Financial Crimes
As technology and AI become more widespread, fraud and other suspicious activity are rising across America. Which types are the most common?
-

Economy8 months ago
Tracking the $3.1 Trillion Financial Crime Pandemic
From money laundering to fraud, financial crime acts as a drain on the economy, totaling an incredible $3.1 trillion.
-

Politics9 months ago
Which Types of Government Rule the World?
Over half the global population is ruled by non-centrist types of government, including autocracies and left or right wing parties.
-

Politics9 months ago
Breaking Down the $524 Billion Investment Needed to Rebuild Ukraine
Ukraine will require an estimated $524B over the next decade to recover from the Russia-Ukraine war. Which sectors have been most impacted?
-

Politics9 months ago
Are Tariffs Causing U.S. Inflation Fears?
Amid tariff increases, consumers’ expectations for U.S. inflation in the next five years have reached their highest level since March 1991.
-

Politics10 months ago
Ranked: Executive Orders by President in the First 100 Days
In his first 100 days, President Trump has issued far more executive orders than any other president in history.
Subscribe
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.Join 375,000+ email subscribers: *Sign Up