Air pollution is the fourth leading risk factor for premature death globally, responsible for 6.7 million deaths per year. Indoor air quality — largely ignored — may be more important than outdoor pollution for most adults.
The 2020 Global Burden of Disease study identified air pollution as the fourth leading risk factor for premature death globally, behind high systolic blood pressure, tobacco smoking, and high fasting plasma glucose. Outdoor air pollution (primarily fine particulate matter, PM2.5) is responsible for approximately 4.2 million deaths per year; indoor air pollution (primarily from cooking and heating with solid fuels) accounts for an additional 2.5 million deaths. In high-income countries where solid-fuel cooking is rare, outdoor PM2.5 and indoor sources (cooking, cleaning products, off-gassing from furniture and building materials) are the primary concerns.
Most adults spend 90% of their time indoors, yet indoor air quality receives far less attention than outdoor pollution. Indoor PM2.5 sources include cooking (gas stoves produce 2–5× higher PM2.5 than electric stoves during cooking), candles, incense, cleaning products (VOCs), and off-gassing from furniture, flooring, and paint. Indoor PM2.5 levels can exceed outdoor levels by 2–5× during cooking events.
Vitaei verdict
Air pollution is an underappreciated longevity risk factor. A HEPA air purifier in the bedroom is one of the highest-ROI longevity investments available — costing £100–300 and reducing PM2.5 exposure by 50–80% during the 7–9 hours you spend sleeping. Check your local AQI, monitor your indoor air, and ventilate when cooking.