Noise levels in WR3 8LX
Mapped noise here: moderate road noise by day, low at night; very high rail noise by day, high at night.
According to DEFRA's Strategic Noise Mapping (Round 4, 2022), the postcode WR3 8LX has modelled road noise of 60.0–64.9 dB by day and 50.0–54.9 dB at night, and rail noise of 70.0–74.9 dB by day and 60.0–64.9 dB at night. These are modelled estimates of noise from major roads and railways, not measurements.
Mapped noise bands at WR3 8LX
| Source | Modelled level | What that means |
|---|---|---|
| Road (day, 07:00–23:00) | 60.0–64.9 dB | Roughly constant busy-road hum — about the level of normal conversation. Clearly noticeable with windows open and audible through single glazing. |
| Road (night, 23:00–07:00) | 50.0–54.9 dB | Noticeable at night — comparable to a quiet conversation nearby. You would likely hear it with a window open, and light sleepers may be disturbed. |
| Rail (day, 07:00–23:00) | 70.0–74.9 dB | Very noticeable, similar to a vacuum cleaner running nearby. Typical of homes directly fronting major roads or railways; outdoor spaces are dominated by the noise. |
| Rail (night, 23:00–07:00) | 60.0–64.9 dB | Roughly constant busy-road hum — about the level of normal conversation. Clearly noticeable with windows open and audible through single glazing. |
Source: DEFRA Strategic Noise Mapping Round 4 (2022), Open Government Licence. Modelled annual averages, not measurements.
Noise map around WR3 8LX
What do these decibel levels feel like?
Decibels are logarithmic: a 10 dB increase sounds roughly twice as loud.
What this data does — and doesn't — cover
- Modelled, not measured.These are DEFRA's computer-modelled estimates (Round 4, 2022), not microphone readings at your door.
- Major sources only. The model covers major roads, major railways and large urban areas. Smaller local roads, neighbours, pubs, building sites and aircraft are not included.
- No mapped noise ≠ quiet. If a location shows no band, it means it falls outside the mapped contours — not that it is silent.
- 2022 snapshot.New roads, developments or traffic changes since 2022 won't show. The next DEFRA round is due around 2027.
More detail on the methodology page.
Bothered by road or rail noise at home?
Acoustic and secondary glazing typically cuts perceived traffic noise dramatically. We're building a free quote-matching service with vetted installers — leave your email and we'll contact you when it launches.
WR3 8LX is in or near Worcester — see the road and rail noise map for Worcester.
Buying nearby? How to check noise levels before buying a house.
Frequently asked questions
- How noisy is WR3 8LX?
- DEFRA's 2022 noise model puts the loudest mapped source at WR3 8LX in the 70.0–74.9 dB band. Mapped noise here: moderate road noise by day, low at night; very high rail noise by day, high at night.
- Is this a measurement of actual noise?
- No. These figures come from DEFRA's Strategic Noise Mapping Round 4 (2022), a computer model of noise from major roads and railways. It estimates average levels over a year, not what you'd hear on any given day.
- What noise sources are missing from this data?
- The model only covers major roads, major railways and large urban areas. Neighbour noise, pubs and venues, building sites, aircraft and smaller local roads are not included.