Crime Grade · FBI UCR Data
Crime Grade for every U.S. city
Each city earns a letter grade and a 1–10 decile rank, computed directly from the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting program — not a proprietary score, not a black-box rating. Same methodology in every city, refreshed twice a year.
Browse by state
Alabama
26 cities
Alaska
3 cities
Arizona
30 cities
Arkansas
20 cities
California
241 cities
Colorado
28 cities
Connecticut
45 cities
Delaware
4 cities
District of Columbia
1 cities
Florida
85 cities
Georgia
39 cities
Hawaii
1 cities
Idaho
12 cities
Illinois
91 cities
Indiana
35 cities
Iowa
20 cities
Kansas
16 cities
Kentucky
17 cities
Louisiana
13 cities
Maine
5 cities
Maryland
9 cities
Massachusetts
83 cities
Michigan
66 cities
Minnesota
41 cities
Mississippi
16 cities
Missouri
28 cities
Montana
6 cities
Nebraska
10 cities
Nevada
5 cities
New Hampshire
10 cities
New Jersey
98 cities
New Mexico
10 cities
New York
71 cities
North Carolina
41 cities
North Dakota
7 cities
Ohio
78 cities
Oklahoma
19 cities
Oregon
23 cities
Pennsylvania
76 cities
Rhode Island
13 cities
South Carolina
23 cities
South Dakota
3 cities
Tennessee
29 cities
Texas
127 cities
Utah
36 cities
Vermont
1 cities
Virginia
24 cities
Washington
40 cities
West Virginia
5 cities
Wisconsin
35 cities
Wyoming
4 cities
How the Crime Grade works
- 1–10 decile against every FBI-reporting U.S. city with population ≥ 25,000. 1 = safest.
- Letter grade: 1–3 = A · 4–5 = B · 6–7 = C · 8 = D · 9–10 = F.
- Source: FBI Crime Data Explorer — agency-level violent crime data.
- Refresh: twice a year, picking up the FBI's annual release each September.