Indianapolis ranks as a “car-dependent city” on Walk Score’s walkability meter

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Nextdoor
  • Email

A view of the Indianapolis Cultural Trail running through Fountain Square. | Photo by INDYtoday team

31 — that’s Indy’s walk score out of 100, making it the 47th most walkable large city in the US with over 800,000 residents. This makes Indianapolis a “car-dependent” city.

A walk score is a ranking that represents the walkability of an address based on pedestrian-friendliness + access to businesses. The score is found by calculating the average walkability of many residential addresses in a city.

Points are given based on the distance between residential areas and places like restaurants, retail shops + entertainment venues. Businesses within five minutes (about a quarter-mile) are given maximum points, with fewer points given to amenities located further away. Anything more than a 30-minute walk is given zero points.

A spike in Pacers Bike Share usage was seen in the month of March. | Photo by INDYtoday team

If hopping on a bicycle is your transportation method of choice, Indy has a slightly higher bike score — rolling in at 43. It’s dubbed “somewhat bikeable” based on the number of bike lanes, hills + bike commuters.

Though the numbers may seem bleak, with the expansion of the Indianapolis Cultural Trail , the Monon 30 Project , and a rise in usage rates for Pacer Bike Share + Lime scooters, we could be looking at an improvement in scores in the coming years.

In the meantime, here are Indy’s five most walkable + bikeable neighborhoods:

  1. Downtown | Walk score: 81 | Bike score: 91
  2. Fountain Square | Walk score: 73 | Bike score: 89
  3. Broad Ripple | Walk score: 70 | Bike score: 68
  4. Near Northside | Walk score: 66 | Bike score: 75
  5. Meridian Kessler | Walk score: 60 | Bike score: 65
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Nextdoor
  • Email
Anna is based in Indianapolis, IN and worked in government communications for five years before joining 6AM City to help launch INDYtoday. When she’s not writing about the Circle City from a local coffee shop, you can find her taking long walks with her dog Babs + reading from her hammock and baking pies from scratch.
More from INDYtoday