🇬🇧 England and Wales — Crime Statistics
Overview
National Overview
England and Wales has a population of approximately 61,806,682 residents, making it one of the countries in our database with comprehensive crime statistics. In the latest reporting period (2025), a total of 3,435,910 crimes were recorded across the country's 43 administrative regions, resulting in an overall national crime rate of 5,559.1 per 100,000 residents. This figure represents the aggregate of all tracked crime categories across all regions and provides a baseline for understanding the country's crime landscape. This page provides a detailed analysis of crime statistics in England and Wales, including a safety assessment, crime category breakdowns, regional comparisons, and methodology notes to help contextualize the data.
Safety Assessment
Among the 31 countries currently tracked by Map of Crimes, England and Wales has a relatively high overall crime rate. Its reported rate of 5,559.1 per 100K places it in the top third of all countries monitored, above the cross-country median of 1,346.1 per 100K. However, this does not necessarily mean England and Wales is less safe in practice — differences in counting methods (some countries count victims, others count incidents or cases), reporting culture, policing intensity, and legal definitions can significantly inflate or deflate the numbers. Countries with transparent reporting systems and high policing coverage may paradoxically report higher rates due to better detection and recording practices.
Understanding the Numbers
Crime statistics are shaped by many factors beyond the actual incidence of criminal behavior. Reporting rates vary depending on public trust in law enforcement, the accessibility of reporting mechanisms, and cultural attitudes toward involving authorities. Countries with higher policing coverage and stronger institutional frameworks may paradoxically record higher crime rates simply because more incidents are detected and documented. Conversely, countries or regions with weaker reporting infrastructure may show lower rates that do not reflect the true scope of criminal activity. When interpreting the data for England and Wales, it is important to consider these systemic factors alongside the raw numbers presented on this page.
Crime Landscape
The crime data for England and Wales covers 4 standardized crime categories. Understanding which categories dominate the overall statistics helps provide context about the types of crime most commonly reported in the country. Here is an overview of the crime landscape based on the latest available data.
The most commonly reported crime category in England and Wales is assault, with a rate of 2,967.6 per 100K (1,834,188 total reported). This category alone accounts for a significant share of all recorded crimes in the country. This is followed by theft at 2,192.6 per 100K (1,355,160 reported), which represents the second most frequently recorded type of crime. The least frequently reported tracked category is robbery, at 108.6 per 100K (67,132 reported). While this category has the lowest rate, it often represents some of the most serious offenses and may be subject to different reporting dynamics.
Regions with Highest Crime Rates
Crime is not evenly distributed across England and Wales. Among the country's 43 regions, substantial variation exists. The following areas have the highest overall crime rates, combining all tracked categories:
- City of London: 58,143.1 per 100K
- West Yorkshire: 8,416.4 per 100K
- Cleveland: 7,992.4 per 100K
- Metropolitan Police: 7,500.8 per 100K
- West Midlands: 7,453.5 per 100K
Regions with Lowest Crime Rates
At the other end of the spectrum, the following regions in England and Wales report the lowest overall crime rates:
- Greater Manchester: 16.1 per 100K
- Wiltshire: 3,641.2 per 100K
- Dorset: 3,791.8 per 100K
- North Yorkshire: 3,980.4 per 100K
- Surrey: 4,137.3 per 100K
The gap between the highest and lowest-rate regions is substantial — City of London has a crime rate approximately 3,600.6× higher than Greater Manchester, illustrating significant regional variation within England and Wales. This variation may reflect differences in urbanization, population density, economic conditions, and policing practices across regions.
Detailed Category Breakdown
The following summarizes the crime breakdown by category for England and Wales in the latest reporting period (2025). Each category is listed with its count and rate per 100,000 residents:
- Assault: 1,834,188 reported (incidents), at a rate of 2,967.6 per 100,000 residents.
- Theft: 1,355,160 reported (incidents), at a rate of 2,192.6 per 100,000 residents.
- Drug Offenses: 179,430 reported (incidents), at a rate of 290.3 per 100,000 residents.
- Robbery: 67,132 reported (incidents), at a rate of 108.6 per 100,000 residents.
Data Sources & Methodology
Crime statistics for England and Wales are sourced from data.police.uk — Home Office / Police Forces (Bulk CSV). This is an official government data source that publishes crime data at the sub-national level. The primary counting unit for this dataset is incidents. The data covers the period ending 2025. The counting unit is important context: countries that count victims may show different figures than those counting incidents or investigations for the same underlying events. Cross-country comparisons should be made with caution, as different countries use fundamentally different counting methods — some count victims, others count incidents, cases, or police investigations. Legal definitions of crime categories also vary. The numbers on this page reflect only crimes reported to and recorded by authorities; the actual incidence of crime may be higher due to underreporting, which varies by crime type and jurisdiction.
Population figures are based on 2024 data from official statistical sources. Crime rates are calculated using the formula: (crime count ÷ population) × 100,000. Rates provide a more meaningful basis for comparison than raw counts, as they normalize for differences in population size. However, rates can be volatile for areas with very small populations, where a few additional crimes can cause large percentage changes.
Crime Breakdown by Category
| Category | Count | Rate per 100K | Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assault | 1,834,188 | 2,967.6 | incidents |
| Theft | 1,355,160 | 2,192.6 | incidents |
| Drug Offenses | 179,430 | 290.3 | incidents |
| Robbery | 67,132 | 108.6 | incidents |
Source Dataset Categories
Each category above aggregates the following original data from the source dataset:
Robbery
Recorded police crime reports
- Robbery
Theft
Sum of 6 theft-related categories
- Bicycle theft
- Burglary
- Other theft
- Shoplifting
- Theft from the person
- Vehicle crime
Note: Vehicle crime includes some criminal damage (inseparable).
Assault
Entire 'Violence and sexual offences' category
- Violence and sexual offences
Note: CRITICAL: Includes sexual offences, homicide, stalking. UK assault rates systematically higher than other countries.
Drug Offenses
Drug possession, production, and supply
- Drugs
Not Tracked
The following source dataset categories are not included in the statistics above:
- Anti-social behaviour — Not a crime — incidents only. ~1M/year.
- Criminal damage and arson — No MOC category. ~500K/year.
- Public order — Disorder offences. ~400K/year.
- Possession of weapons — No MOC category. ~40K/year.
- Other crime — Catch-all. ~50K/year.
Not all crime types from the source dataset are included in the categories above. Only the categories listed are tracked.
Sub-areas in England and Wales
| Area | Population | Total Crimes | Rate per 100K |
|---|---|---|---|
| City of London | 15,111 | 8,786 | 58,143.1 |
| West Yorkshire | 2,435,236 | 204,960 | 8,416.4 |
| Cleveland | 600,369 | 47,984 | 7,992.4 |
| Metropolitan Police | 9,074,625 | 680,673 | 7,500.8 |
| West Midlands | 3,036,605 | 226,333 | 7,453.5 |
| South Yorkshire | 1,430,623 | 98,738 | 6,901.7 |
| Northumbria | 1,509,809 | 101,403 | 6,716.3 |
| Humberside | 962,532 | 62,882 | 6,533.0 |
| Merseyside | 1,475,541 | 95,617 | 6,480.1 |
| Lancashire | 1,601,645 | 96,238 | 6,008.7 |
| Nottinghamshire | 1,188,090 | 70,929 | 5,970.0 |
| Avon and Somerset | 1,813,665 | 107,409 | 5,922.2 |
| Durham | 650,500 | 37,973 | 5,837.5 |
| Derbyshire | 1,096,526 | 62,221 | 5,674.4 |
| North Wales | 697,115 | 38,239 | 5,485.3 |
| South Wales | 1,363,561 | 73,988 | 5,426.1 |
| Kent | 1,931,684 | 104,724 | 5,421.4 |
| Staffordshire | 1,177,578 | 63,718 | 5,410.9 |
| Sussex | 1,759,789 | 92,862 | 5,276.9 |
| Essex | 1,929,610 | 101,464 | 5,258.3 |
| Hampshire | 2,062,619 | 108,300 | 5,250.6 |
| Dyfed-Powys | 524,219 | 26,505 | 5,056.1 |
| Northamptonshire | 813,682 | 41,002 | 5,039.1 |
| Hertfordshire | 1,236,191 | 61,769 | 4,996.7 |
| Cumbria | 510,680 | 25,500 | 4,993.3 |
| Leicestershire | 1,175,364 | 57,408 | 4,884.3 |
| Lincolnshire | 789,502 | 38,541 | 4,881.7 |
| Cambridgeshire | 933,972 | 44,844 | 4,801.4 |
| Devon and Cornwall | 1,840,161 | 85,825 | 4,664.0 |
| Thames Valley | 2,640,201 | 122,671 | 4,646.3 |
| Gloucestershire | 669,380 | 30,994 | 4,630.3 |
| Warwickshire | 632,207 | 29,090 | 4,601.3 |
| West Mercia | 1,340,814 | 61,038 | 4,552.3 |
| Cheshire | 1,139,884 | 51,466 | 4,515.0 |
| Bedfordshire | 749,943 | 32,421 | 4,323.1 |
| Gwent | 601,686 | 25,335 | 4,210.7 |
| Suffolk | 786,231 | 32,823 | 4,174.7 |
| Norfolk | 940,359 | 39,232 | 4,172.0 |
| Surrey | 1,248,649 | 51,660 | 4,137.3 |
| North Yorkshire | 844,571 | 33,617 | 3,980.4 |
| Dorset | 798,914 | 30,293 | 3,791.8 |
| Wiltshire | 767,575 | 27,949 | 3,641.2 |
| Greater Manchester | 3,009,664 | 486 | 16.1 |
Data Disclaimer
Source: data.police.uk — Home Office / Police Forces (Bulk CSV) Licensed under Open Government Licence v3.0.
Data may be delayed by up to 1 months from the reporting period.
Coverage: Counting unit: incidents (recorded police crime reports). CRITICAL: 'assault' category includes sexual offences (~5-8%), homicide (<0.1%), stalking/harassment (~5-7%). Cannot be separated from source data. UK assault rates are systematically higher than other countries. homicide and sexual_assault categories unavailable — lumped into 'Violence and sexual offences'. Vehicle crime includes minor criminal damage component (inseparable). Excludes Scotland (5.5M pop.) and Northern Ireland (1.9M pop.). Excludes Action Fraud data (~800K fraud reports/year). Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: Office for National Statistics licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right 2026.
Data Quality Notes
- 🔴 Criticalassault includes sexual offences, homicide, stalkingFuture: supplement with ONS Table A4 for PFA-level breakdowns.
- 🔴 Criticalhomicide category unavailable
- 🔴 Criticalsexual_assault category unavailable
- ⚠️ WarningCity of London rate inflation
ℹ️ Note (3)
- BTP crimes geographically assigned
- Action Fraud exclusion
- Population from mid-2024 for 2025 crime data
Cite This Data
Use the following citation when referencing this data:
Map of Crimes. (2025). England and Wales — Crime Statistics. Retrieved April 15, 2026, from https://mapofcrimes.com/en/crime/england-and-wales/ "England and Wales — Crime Statistics." Map of Crimes, 2025, mapofcrimes.com/en/crime/england-and-wales/. Accessed 15 Apr. 2026. @misc{mapofcrimes2025england-and-wales,
author = {{Map of Crimes}},
title = {England and Wales — Crime Statistics},
year = {2025},
url = {https://mapofcrimes.com/en/crime/england-and-wales/},
urldate = {2026-04-15},
note = {Online crime statistics dataset}
}