Whether you’re new to town or a longtime local, here’s a cheatsheet to living in Pittsburgh.
1. 📍 Know Your Neighborhoods
Our rivers, hills, and valleys have created unique boundaries for Pittsburgh’s 90 neighborhoods — pockets of communities with their own special character. Even within those official neighborhoods, there are many distinct sub-neighborhoods — like Four Mile Run in Greenfield or Mexican War Streets in the Central North Side.
- Explore hidden gems through our neighborhood guide archive. (I’m slowly making my way through Pittsburgh’s 90 neighborhoods, with pit stops in boroughs and townships along the way.)
2. 🪑 Respect the Parking Chair
On a winter day in the Burrr-gh, you’re likely to see snowy streets and parking spots marked with chairs — from the old wooden ones you sit in for church basement fish fries to striped ‘90s beach seats. Whatever their form, it’s the function that matters: you have to honor the sanctity of parking chair dibs. (That is, don’t park in a spot that someone’s reserving with their chair!)

The first Carnegie Library opened on the North Side in 1886; the Squirrel Hill location was built in 1972. (Francesca Dabecco / City Cast Pittsburgh)
3. 📚 Get (& Use) A Library Card
There are dozens of Carnegie Library branches across Allegheny County, and even more that participate in its lending library programs. But did you know that you can check out more than just books? From power tools to bakeware, here are some things you might not know you can get with a library card.
4. 🚗 Don’t Honk in the Tunnels
It’s scary enough traveling through a mountain; we don’t need an echo of blasting horns. Not honking is the best way to avoid face offs and traffic build ups. (Yinz know what happened in the Liberty Tubes in 1924, don’t ya?)

If there’s a chair, don’t park there! (Matt Barnes / Getty)
5. ☁️ Prepare for Gray All Day
Pittsburgh is known as one of the cloudiest in the U.S. (PPG Paints even has a “Pittsburgh Gray” color!) That lack of sunshine can lead to a vitamin D deficiency. Pro tip: Take a supplement and buy a light therapy lamp.
6. 🌳 Protect Your Parks & Rivers
We’re lucky to have lush green spaces and waterways for outdoor recreation. Springdale-born environmentalist and author Rachel Carson once said: “Conservation is a cause that has no end. There is no point at which we will say our work is finished.” Here are six ways to get involved, from volunteer cleanups to tree plantings.
7. 💬 Learn a Little Pittsburghese N’at
If you’re new in tahn, it may be helpful to know local lingo. Someone cuts you off? Call ‘em a “jagoff.” (Not to be confused with “jag,” often a term of endearment.) Want to order a soft drink? Your waiter might look at you funny if you say “soda” instead of “pop.” Your house is a mess? You should “redd up.” Addressing a crowd? “Yinz” is a gender neutral pronoun!
8. ⬅️ Revel in Pittsburgh’s Proud History
To fully appreciate our historic city, learn about the Indigenous roots of our river names and our critical role in the U.S. labor movement. Or the medical breakthroughs that happened here — from the first emergency medicine service to the polio vaccine. Or the many inventions we gifted the world — like the country’s first commercial radio station, an all-motion picture house, the Ferris Wheel, and the banana split!

Fans have been swinging Terrible Towels since 1975. (Icon Sportswire / Getty)
9. 🏆 Be A Champion
Pittsburgh is one of the winningest cities in the U.S., boasting multiple championships among all three major sports teams. Even if you don’t love to watch, it can be helpful to have a passing knowledge of (or tolerance for) the Penguins, Pirates, and Steelers. (Start with knowing how to pronounce these famous players’ names) And here’s a fun, fashionable bonus — we’re the only city in America where our city itself and all of our sports teams share the same color palette. (We seriously think the Terrible Towel could be our city’s official flag.)
10. 💛 Be A Good Neighbor
Fred Rogers once said, “Imagine what our neighborhoods would be like if each of us offered, as a matter of course, just one kind word to another person.” Do that, and wear his classic cardigan while you’re at it! (Here’s where to thrift one.)
- Want to lend a helping hand? Here’s how to fight food insecurity and ways to help your neighbors no matter the season, whether its grass cutting in the summer or snow shoveling in the winter.






