Safety & Crime Across America
Violent and property crime rates, plus disaster declarations, for every US ZIP code
National Snapshot
27,650+
ZIP Codes With Crime Data
N/A
Avg Violent Crime Rate
854,582
Disaster Declarations
FBI Crime Data Explorer (UCR/NIBRS), last updated May 4, 2026. Disaster counts from FEMA OpenFEMA.
These are the 10 US ZIP codes with the lowest reported violent crime rates (per 100,000 residents), capped at 2 entries per state. Coverage is limited to agencies that report to the FBI program.
Safest Neighborhoods
Data temporarily unavailable.
These are the 10 US ZIP codes with the highest reported violent crime rates, capped at 2 entries per state. Rates reflect incidents per 100,000 residents and depend on consistent agency reporting.
Highest Reported Crime Rates
Data temporarily unavailable.
50-State Comparison
Click any column header to sort. Rates are per 100,000 residents, averaged across ZIP codes with FBI agency-level reporting.
State comparison data temporarily unavailable.
Explore safety rankings by state
Drill down into Safest Neighborhoods by state to find the lowest crime ZIP codes near you.
Coverage: 27,650+ ZIP codes with FBI crime data. Coverage depends on which local agencies report to the FBI program; rural ZIPs are often undercovered.
FAQ
Where does Mubboo's crime data come from?
Crime statistics come from the FBI's Crime Data Explorer, which compiles reports from law enforcement agencies nationwide. Disaster data comes from FEMA's OpenFEMA dataset, and social vulnerability metrics from the CDC's Social Vulnerability Index.
How accurate is ZIP code-level crime data?
FBI data is reported at the agency/jurisdiction level and mapped to ZIP codes. Coverage varies — not all agencies report to the FBI program, and some rural areas have limited data. We show data only where reliable reporting exists.
What's the difference between violent and property crime?
Violent crime includes murder, robbery, aggravated assault, and rape. Property crime includes burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft. Both are reported per capita to allow fair comparison between areas of different population sizes.
Does a low crime rate guarantee safety?
No single dataset can guarantee safety. Crime rates reflect reported incidents and may not capture all activity. We recommend using this data alongside local knowledge, community resources, and personal judgment when evaluating an area.
How often is crime data updated?
The FBI releases annual crime statistics, typically with a 1-2 year reporting lag. FEMA disaster data is updated continuously as declarations are made. We refresh our database when new annual releases become available.
Crime data sourced from the FBI Crime Data Explorer (UCR / NIBRS). Disaster declarations from FEMA OpenFEMA. Both update annually. See our full methodology →
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