The Safest and Most Dangerous Places in Arizona: Crime Maps and Statistics

Crime per Capita in Arizona

This overview combines violent, property, and other offenses into a single grade for Arizona. The dedicated violent crime and property crime pages go deeper on each. The map below shows the overall crime rate per 1,000 residents.

 

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

B-

Overall Crime Grade™

C
C+
Other Crime Grade
A-

$3.4 billion

Cost of Crime™ for Arizona

In 2025, crime will cost $1,223 per household.

More cost data

On the map, green marks the parts of Arizona with the least crime overall and red marks the most. Each area is weighted by the type and severity of every offense, so a place with rare but serious violent crime can grade differently from one with frequent petty theft. The Interpreting the Crime Maps section below explains how to read the colors.

Is Arizona Safe?

The B- overall grade blends the violent, property, and other grades shown above into one measure, set against the average US state, where Arizona's combined rate is slightly lower than the norm. Arizona sits in the 57th percentile, ahead of 57% of states and behind 43%. The grade covers only Arizona's official city boundaries. See the table below for nearby states.

The overall crime rate in Arizona is 28.83 per 1,000 residents in a typical year. Residents generally consider the south part of the state the safest. Your chance of being a victim ranges from 1 in 24 in the northeast cities to 1 in 54 in the south.

Counting total incidents instead of per-capita rates, the central parts of Arizona report the most crime, about 77,961 cases per year. The east part reports the fewest, around 986 per year.

The Cost of Crime™ in Arizona

Across all crime types, the projected cost of crime in Arizona for 2025 is $3,352,733,024, about $452 per resident and $1,223 per household. That equals 1.1% of the median household income. These figures cover tangible costs, which include:
  1. Criminal justice system costs (law enforcement, courts, and imprisonment): 53.6%
  2. Direct costs to victims (damaged property, medical expenses, and lost wages): 34.9%
  3. Lost economic contribution from offenders (time in prison or repeat offenses): 11.5%

How Much Does Crime Cost in Arizona Compared to Other States?

Arizona: $452
New Mexico: $835
New Jersey: $240
USA: $464

The overall cost of crime per resident in Arizona is $452 per year, which is $12 less than the national average. The comparison below uses states similar to Arizona:
  • In New Mexico, crime costs $835 per person, which is $383 more than in Arizona.
  • In New Jersey, crime costs $240 per person, which is $213 less than in Arizona

2025 Projected Cost by Type of Crime

The table below shows the total cost of crime to the residents of Arizona for the year 2025 along with the projected cost per resident.
Crime
Cost to Arizona
Cost per Arizona Resident
Murder
$987.1 million
$133
Rape/Sexual Assault
$263.9 million
$36
Robbery
$144.9 million
$20
Assault
$589.8 million
$80
Kidnapping
$52.7 million
$7
Vehicle Theft
$267.2 million
$36
Burglary
$157.1 million
$21
Theft
$504.0 million
$68
Arson
$20.7 million
$3
Vandalism
$184.7 million
$25
Animal Cruelty
$4.02 million
$1
Drug Crimes
$146.9 million
$20
Identity Theft
$29.6 million
$4
Total Cost of Crime
$3,352,733,024
$452

The Intangible Cost of Crime in Arizona

The totals above count tangible costs only. Violent crime also carries a human cost, the pain and trauma borne by victims and their families, which research-based methods estimate so it can be compared across places. That intangible cost in Arizona totals $8,027,734,636 ($1,083 per resident), and all of it comes from violent crime rather than property loss. Added to the tangible costs, the full estimate reaches $11,380,467,660 ($1,535 per resident). All Cost of Crime figures come from scholarly research on the cost of crime. Read more about our methodology here.

Interpreting the Crime Maps

Crime rates on the map are measured per resident, so areas with heavy visitor traffic can read high because crime follows crowds, even where few people live. The central part of the state holds more retail establishments, which lifts recorded crime around those blocks. A red area does not always mean the neighborhood is unsafe for residents.

Airports, parks, and transit hubs create the same effect. Major airports, of which Arizona has 1, draw large crowds with few residents nearby, so they read as high-crime spots. Parks and recreational areas, of which Arizona has 1,199, do the same, and of Arizona's 7,412,781 residents few live beside them. Before assuming an area is unsafe, 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 Arizona at ISP Reports.

Arizona Crime Breakdown

The tables below show which crimes are used to calculate the Crime Grades above. All crime rates are shown as the number of crimes per 1,000 Arizona residents in a standard year.

Violent Crime Rates

Crime Type
Crime Rate
Assault
2.770
Robbery
0.6216
Rape
0.5871
Murder
0.0709
Total Violent Crime
4.050 (C)
 
 

 


Property Crime Rates

Crime Type
Crime Rate
Theft
13.13
Vehicle Theft
2.327
Burglary
2.337
Arson
0.1158
Total Property Crime
17.91 (C+)
 
 

 


Other Crime Rates

Crime Type
Crime Rate
Kidnapping
0.1173
Drug Crimes
2.679
Vandalism
3.488
Identity Theft
0.5158
Animal Cruelty
0.0733
Total "Other" Rate
6.874 (A-)

 


Crime Maps and Rates for Nearby States

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

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

Crime Maps and Rates for State with Similar Populations

Arizona is lower versus other states of the same size for 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
A+
A-
A-
A
A+
A+
C-
B-
B-
B
B-
B-
D-
C
C
B+
A-
A-
D+
D+
D+

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

Safety and school performance are separate topics, but both shape moving decisions. Using SchoolGrade data, schools in Arizona average SchoolGrade of D+, with 31% actual proficiency versus 31% projected; overall, schools meet expectations. See Arizona schools on SchoolGrade

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.

Crime By Zip Code Download

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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.