Colorado Property Crime Rates and Non-Violent Crime Maps

Property Crime per Capita in Colorado

Property crime covers theft, burglary, vehicle theft, and arson, offenses against belongings rather than people. The map below shows the property crime rate per 1,000 Colorado residents.

 

Colorado Map of Property Crime Rates
Click the map to explore
A+ B C D F
Safest Highest crime
Colorblind friendly off

F

Overall Crime Grade™

D-
Property Crime Grade
F
Other Crime Grade
D-

$1.5 billion

Cost of Crime™ for Colorado

In 2025, property crime will cost $655 per household.

More cost data

On the map, green marks the parts of Colorado with the least property crime and red marks the most, weighted by the type and severity of each offense. Property crime is the most common category of crime, so these maps track closely with where stores, parking, and daytime foot traffic sit. The Interpreting the Crime Maps section below explains why busy commercial blocks can look worse than the neighborhoods around them.

The F grade reflects how often theft, burglary, vehicle theft, and arson happen in Colorado against the average US state, where the rate is much higher than the norm. Colorado sits in the 6th percentile for property-crime safety, ahead of 6% of states and behind 94%. The grade covers only Colorado's official city boundaries. See the table below for nearby states.

The property crime rate in Colorado is 30.74 per 1,000 residents in a typical year. Residents generally point to the east part of the state as the safest for their belongings. Your odds of a property-crime loss range from 1 in 27 in the central cities to 1 in 47 in the east.

Counting total incidents instead of per-capita rates, the central parts of Colorado report the most property crime, about 60,532 cases per year. The south part reports the fewest, around 4,936 per year.

The Cost of Crime™ in Colorado

Property crime in Colorado is projected to cost $1,549,931,011 in 2025, about $256 per resident and $655 per household. That equals 0.5% of the median household income. All of it is measurable loss: replaced vehicles, repaired break-ins, stolen goods, and the policing and courts that respond. Because property crime leaves a repair bill rather than a lasting injury, these tangible costs make up its full economic toll. They split into:
  1. Criminal justice system costs (law enforcement, courts, and imprisonment): 58.0%
  2. Direct costs to victims (damaged property, medical expenses, and lost wages): 36.2%
  3. Lost economic contribution from offenders (time in prison or repeat offenses): 5.8%

How Much Does Property Crime Cost in Colorado Compared to Other States?

Colorado: $256
Washington: $259
New Hampshire: $64
USA: $136

Property crime costs $256 per resident each year in Colorado, which is $120 more than the national average. The comparison below uses states similar to Colorado:
  • In Washington, crime costs $259 per person, which is $3 more than in Colorado.
  • In New Hampshire, crime costs $64 per person, which is $193 less than in Colorado

2025 Projected Property Crime Cost by Type

The table below breaks the property-crime total into its four offenses for Colorado, with the projected cost per resident.
Crime
Cost to Colorado
Cost per Colorado Resident
Vehicle Theft
$706.2 million
$117
Burglary
$209.2 million
$35
Theft
$600.6 million
$99
Arson
$34.0 million
$6
Total Cost of Property Crime
$1,549,931,011
$256

How the Property Crime Cost Is Estimated

Property crime carries no pain-and-suffering figure in this model. Its cost is the replacement and repair value of what was taken or damaged, plus the policing, courts, and lost offender productivity that follow. Stolen and damaged property has a market price, which is why this total is easier to pin down than the human cost of violent crime in Colorado. All Cost of Crime figures come from scholarly research on the cost of crime. Read more about our methodology here.

Interpreting the Property Crime Maps

Property crime rates are measured per resident, so places where shoppers and commuters outnumber residents read high. Stores are where shoplifting, theft, and vehicle break-ins happen, yet almost nobody lives there, so the per-capita rate climbs. How strongly this shows on the map depends on retail density; the central part of the state has more retail establishments. A red commercial strip does not mean the homes nearby are unsafe.

Parking lots and transit stops follow the same pattern: heavy daytime traffic, few residents, so per-capita property crime reads high. Major airports, of which Colorado has 1, are the extreme case. To judge a residential block, weigh both the per-capita rate and the total number of incidents, and note what sits nearby.

The interactive maps load faster on a strong connection. Compare high speed internet in Colorado at ISP Reports.

Colorado Property Crime Breakdown

The table below shows which non-violent crimes are used to calculate the Crime Grade above. All property crime rates are shown as the number of crimes per 1,000 Colorado residents in a standard year.

Crime Type
Crime Rate
Theft
19.16
Vehicle Theft
7.536
Burglary
3.811
Arson
0.2326
Total Property Crime
30.74 (F)

Crime Maps and Rates for Nearby States

Compared to surrounding states, the rate of property crime in Colorado is higher. The table below shows Crime Grades for states close to Colorado.

Nearby State
Overall Crime Grade
Violent Crime Grade
Property Crime Grade
B+
A
A
F
F
D-
C-
B
C
C+
B+
C+
D+
C-
C
C
C
B-
D+
D+
D
A-
B
A+
D
D
D-
B+
B
B+

Crime Maps and Rates for State with Similar Populations

Colorado is higher versus other states of the same size for property crime. The table below compares crime in states with comparable overall population in the state‘s boundaries.

Similar State
Overall Crime Grade
Violent Crime Grade
Property Crime Grade
C+
F
F
B
A
A
F
F
F
C+
C+
C+
B
B-
B-
D-
C
C
B+
A-
A-
D+
D+
D+
D-
C+
C+
C-
B-
B-

Considering only the property crime rate, Colorado is as safe as the national average.

About the Data

CrimeGrade.org provides highly detailed and accurate crime data, used by insurance companies, home security firms, and other industries. Our data is available for licensing—learn more about our USA crime data and licensing.

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All maps and statistics above are projections, not certainties, and provided without guarantee free of charge. Verify all info before making any decisions based on the data.