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  1. In 2023, for every 100,000 people in the US, there were 364 violent crimes and 1,917 property crimes. The combined violent and property crime rate fell 3% from 2022, driven by a 3.5% decrease in the violent crime rate and a 2.9% decrease in the property crime rate. Since 2001, that overall crime rate is down 45.2%.

    Assault is the most common type of violent crime in the US. In 2023, 72.6% of all violent crimes were aggravated assaults, 18.3% were robberies; 7.5% were rapes, and 1.6% were murders.

    Stealing (technically called “larceny-theft” by the FBI) is the most common property crime. In 2023, 70.3% of all property crimes were larceny-thefts, 16.6% were motor vehicle thefts, and 13.1% were burglaries.

    At the state level, New Mexico had both the highest violent crime rate (749) and property crime rate (2,887) in 2023. Maine (102) had the lowest violent crime rate and Idaho (809) had the lowest.  

    Although it’s not a state, the FBI also provides data for Washington, DC, which had a violent crime rate of 1,151 and a property crime rate of 4,307.

    If you’re curious about state-level data, we have pages for each state [here](https://usafacts.org/answers/what-is-the-crime-rate-in-the-us/country/united-states/).

  2. Ok-Lingonberry-8261 on

    The longer time goes on, the more I like the “lead paint/leaded gasoline” hypothesis.

    (Tl;dr: high blood levels of lead, especially in childhood, affect cognition and impulse control, leading to violence. The 1970s push to remove lead from housing and gasoline resulted in a drop in violent crime a generation later.)

  3. bigboilerdawg on

    The chart on the left is kind of hard to make out, especially the violent crime bars. The chart on the right is much better.

  4. frequentcannibalism on

    Wish more people knew this. Safety is at an all time high for modern era.

  5. kenobrien73 on

    Flies in the face of the copaganda……amazingly the lies get worse when you see your local agency’s closure rates. Police are a grift.

  6. I never knew that North Carolina had so much crime. Why is that?

    Are we sure that’s accurate?

  7. Only people I know that have been robbed or assaulted are stories from old people recounting their youth. Those same old people then proceed to tell me and my young friends who have never been assaulted or robbed that crime is worse today.

  8. It would be interesting to include white collar crime in this visualization. I can’t help but wonder if all the blustery claims of rising crime are just a distraction from the actual (white collar) crime.

  9. SpicyBreakfastTomato on

    Looks like North Carolina is the place to stay away from.

    Edit: oops! Read it wrong! DC is the place to avoid!

  10. DrTommyNotMD on

    Vandalism really feels like it’s gone up, but everything else down in my lifetime. Obviously feelings rarely coincide with facts though.

  11. Mississippi not being dead last. Also, is DC going off the chart on property crime?

  12. TheBatemanFlex on

    wait are you telling me that we haven’t been invaded by criminals the last 4 years?!

  13. *Crimes reported by law enforcement agencies

    This is in no world reflective of the actual crimes happening, just the ones cops report. I see ten times the crime just driving to work every day that I did 20 years ago, cops just don’t bother to pursue it.

  14. 1daytogether on

    Because things of value and money have shifted a lot more to digital now. I’m guessing the amount of unreported scammers, hackers, grifters and other cybercriminals have increased a hundred fold in recent years. Thieves have just found new ways to steal and harm. And what about white collar crime? How much has that increased? The ones who truly harm way more of us on unimaginable scales that petty thieves and isolated incidents never could? Does anyone keep count of how much banks, tech companies, lobbying etc have covertly stolen from us and made lives significantly worse for society?

    This doesn’t tell the whole story.