Features & Capabilities

Local Haze crowdsources outdoor air quality data from many different sources and delivers it to your iPhone and Apple Watch.

In release 2.3, as a Local Haze subscriber, you can now get air quality readings “at a glance” on your Apple Watch, widgets on your phone, and notifications for a sensor where significant changes in air quality have been detected.

About Local Haze

Local Haze reports air quality data from a variety of sensors across six continents, including AirGradient, AirNow, PurpleAir, Sensor.Community and uRADMonitor. In addition to viewing current air quality conditions, using Local Haze allows you to share sensor maps displaying air quality readings anywhere in the world.

The World Health Organization and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have developed guidelines for safe air quality as impacted by chemical pollutants and particulate matter (PM). PM smaller than 10 micrometers poses problems because it can enter the bloodstream. Local Haze displays the level of smaller PM 2.5 particles, which pose the most significant health risk.

Local Haze Apple Watch app

If you have disabled Automatic App Install on your Apple Watch, you can follow these directions to manually install it: https://support.apple.com/en-ca/guide/watch/apd99e3c6a68/watchos

Local Haze Widgets

A Local Haze widget allows subscribers, at a glance, to see a snapshot of their favorite AQ sensor. A tap on the widget displays the Local Haze sensor details screen. For directions on how to add a widget, visit this page: https://localhaze.humanlogic.com/2023/07/22/adding-a-local-haze-widget/

Notifications in Local Haze

To set a notification, subscribers can tap the bell icon on the sensor details screen. Notifications will be sent to your phone when the air quality changes.

How Local Haze Displays Air Quality Data

Local Haze displays the EPA’s Air Quality Index (AQI) and a confidence rating for each sensor reading. The confidence rating is a feature that is unique to Local Haze and depends on many factors, including sensor maintenance and data freshness.

Each AQ sensor reading is displayed as a face icon according to the key below, with a badge on the lower right that represents a confidence rating:

Green Face: Air quality is Good. Air quality is considered satisfactory, and air pollution poses little or no risk.

Yellow Face: Air quality is Moderate. Air quality is acceptable. For some pollutants, there may 
be a moderate health concern.

Orange Face: Air quality is Unhealthy for sensitive groups. The general public is not likely to be affected, but people with heart and lung disease, older adults, and children are at greater risk.

Red Face: Air quality is Unhealthy Everyone may begin to experience some adverse health effects, and members of the sensitive groups may experience more serious effects.

Black face mask with respirator: Air quality is Hazardous. Everyone may experience more serious health effects with possible emergency conditions. The entire population is likely to be affected.

Note: The source for the above AQ index classification is from Air Quality Index (AQI) Basics - EPA: https://www.airnow.gov/aqi/aqi-basics/

The confidence rating badges are:

Green badge with thumbs up: High confidence in the air sensor reading.

Yellow badge with OK sign: OK confidence in the air sensor reading.

Red badge with thumbs down: Low confidence in the air sensor reading.

We hope you enjoy using Local Haze! If you have any feedback about Local Haze please email us at localhaze@humanlogic.com or visit https://localhaze.humanlogic.com/

User Growth & Download Statistics

App
By:
HumanLogic
Rating:
4.60
(30)
Version:
2.3.1 Last updated: 2025-07-14
Version code:
875949726
Creation date:
2018-01-25
Compatible devices:
Size:
59.44MB
URLs:
Website ,Privacy policy
Full description:
See detailed description
Source:
Apple Apps Store
Data ingested on:
2026-06-13
Compare stats and ranking:

Ranking

Contact the developer

Chrome-Stats does not own this Apple app. Please use these information below to contact the Apple app developer.
Developed by:
HumanLogic
Apple Apps Store
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/local-haze/id1278998405
Website:
https://localhaze.humanlogic.com

User Reviews

Local Haze is widely praised for ease of use, clean UI, broad sensor coverage, and timely air quality data, including PurpleAir sensors. It delivers useful fire alerts and fast updates. Repeated criticisms focus on the subscription model for push notifications and the desire for home screen widgets. Some users note minor PurpleAir data discrepancies and desire more top-level information, but overall it’s strong for monitoring nearby air quality.
Pros
  • Easy to use with a clean interface and fast, reliable data.
  • Accurate data with a robust sensor network and reliability indicators.
  • Wide range of monitors/sensor sources with frequent updates.
  • Timely air quality alerts during fires and hazardous conditions.
  • PurpleAir integration shows PM1, PM2.5, PM10 and AQI readings.
Cons
  • Subscription-based push notifications (recurring pricing) is a major drawback; many prefer a one-time purchase.
  • Lack of home screen widgets and repeated requests for a widget.
Recent reviews
Easy to use, clean interface, and accurate data. Auto fills locations around you so you don’t have to manually input them yourself. Neat tool!
by no*****, 2025-11-07

The good: intuitive access to sensor network, more accuracy than other apps I’ve used, sensor reliability indicators. The bad: favorites cannot be grouped by location. The ugly: $10/year subscription to turn on air quality push notifications. Notifications are a basic safety feature in an air quality app, and linking them to a subscription service feels like hostage-taking. I’d gladly pay $30 for a one-time purchase of this app, but signing on to an open ended recurring payment where I’m opted into future price hikes is a hard no. The guy who invented SaaS should be vilified as one of history’s greatest scoundrels.
by Ma*****, 2024-04-23

I was delighted to find an app to read local purple air sensors on my phone. However, the same sensor provides different AQI on my phone and purple air website.
by ju*****, 2021-09-04
View all user reviews ›

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