Boston Parks have climbed this year’s Parkscore rankings to break back into the highest levels nationwide, with a perfect score on park accessibility tempered by limited space and funding.
The city came in twelfth in 2025’s list, three spots above its placement last year and just barely enough to make it into the dozen best cities showcased by the Trust for Public Land (TPL), a nonprofit advocating better parks nationwide.
Boston’s
best score continues to be its park accessibility. It’s maintained a
perfect 100, indicating that every resident inside the city limits is
half a mile of walking or less away from a public park.
That
range is what the TPL wants every city to achieve, chosen since it’s
the average distance most people are willing to walk to get somewhere.
Boston’s perfect score places it “among the highest in this category
[nationally]” according to the TPL report, with only San Francisco
matching it among the top dozen.
The
city’s accessibility also contributes to a high equity in its park
distribution. It’s not perfect, with neighborhoods of color having 12%
less park space nearby and low-income neighborhoods having 25% less. But
having every resident a short distance from a park, including
neighborhoods of color or low income, netted the city a score of 81.
A
clearer picture of the city’s parks strategy can be gleaned from its
acreage, which is actually Boston’s lowest score at 54. That judgement
is split into overall city space used and average park size, with the
city’s land use again “among the highest [nationally]” at 20% but
average size lagging well behind the competition.
That
seeming contradiction is explained by Boston’s small area compared to
other cities. While it doesn’t have the geography to compete with places
like NYC or Chicago on raw park size, the city still dedicates a large
portion of the land it does have to parks and achieves its nearly
unparalleled coverage and equity by spreading out a large number of
smaller parks.
A spokesperson for the Boston Parks and Recreation Department (BPRD) told The Boston Guardian the department is nevertheless looking to continue expanding parkland.
“As
our neighborhoods grow denser, ensuring access to high-quality public
open space is more important than ever,” they said in a statement.
“While Boston faces various barriers to land acquisition such as high
costs and limited land, the Parks Department has prioritized open space
acquisition as a way to meet the demands of a growing city.”
The
department said it’s been streamlining its land buying process in
recent years through policies like the Open Space Acquisition Program.
It acquired land to expand the Roslindale Wetlands Urban Wilds and
Sherrin Woods Urban Wilds, as well as establish new parks at the
Egleston Square Peace Garden and Sprague Pond Reserve.
That
said, the city’s scores in investment and amenities remain above
average rather than outstanding. Boston’s parks spending sits at $183
per resident, above the national average of $133 but well short of
Chicago’s $227, Washington, D.C.’s $393 or Seattle’s $418. Boston’s
above-average 66 score on amenities also varies wildly when broken down
by amenity type, scoring 100 on splashpads but 31 on sports fields and
just 11 on permanent restrooms.
BPRD
spokespersons declined to comment directly on funding, but did say that
the department is working to unify Boston’s public spaces under BPRD’s
portfolio and look for opportunities to create new ones as part of
public or private housing construction projects.
“We’re
working with the Mayor’s Office of Housing and the Planning Department
to identify city owned properties that are currently serving as
important parks, plazas, and natural areas, and to transfer them to BPRD
to ensure their permanent protection,” they said. “BPRD is also
collaborating with city agencies to create new parks as part of
affordable housing development. The Odom Serenity Garden in Mattapan is
an example of a park created through this process.”
Residents can find Boston’s full Parkscore report, and a breakdown of the Trust’s methodology, online at https://www.tpl.org/city/boston-massachusetts.