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TwitterIn 2024/25, there were ****** burglary offences recorded in London, a decline when compared with the previous reporting year. During the provided time period, the reporting year with the most burglary offences recorded was 2018/19, when there were approximately ****** burglaries.
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TwitterThe crime rate in London was 106.4 crime offences per thousand people for the 2024/25 reporting year, compared with 105.8 in the previous year. Between 2015/16 and 2019/20, the crime rate in the UK capital increased in every reporting year. The sudden drop in 2019/20 was due to the COVID-19 pandemic causing a sharp reduction in certain types of crime, such as robbery and theft. Crime patterns in the capital Overall there were 951,803 crimes reported by the police in London in 2024/25, compared with 938,020 in the previous reporting year. Types of crime that have increased recently include violent crimes, shoplifting, and theft from the person offences. One positive is that the number of homicide offences in London has fallen to much lower levels than seen in the late 2010s. Additionally, the Metropolitan Police force area has a lower crime rate than many of the UK's other major police forces, such as West Yorkshire, Greater Manchester, and South Yorkshire. Police recruitment drive ends era of cuts The rise in crime in London happened alongside a decline in both personnel and funding for the London Metropolitan Police. Compared with 2010 for example, there were around 3,000 fewer police officers in 2018, while annual funding was reduced to around 3.3 billion pounds between 2013/14 and 2018/19, compared with 3.62 billion in 2012/13. These cuts were due to the policy of austerity that was implemented by the UK government during that time period, but this has recently been replaced by pledges to increase spending and to recruit more police. In 2024/25, the budget for the Metropolitan Police was over five billion pounds, while the number of officers in 2024 increased to around 35,310.
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TwitterThis dataset provides street-level crime data reported by the Metropolitan Police Service and the City of London Police from January to December 2024, sourced from the UK Government's open data portal data.police.uk.
It includes detailed records of crimes by type, location, police force, and outcome category, covering the entire London region.
Crime ID: Unique identifier for the crime reportMonth: Reporting month in YYYY-MM formatReported by: Police force (Metropolitan / City of London)Crime type: Category of crime (e.g., drugs, burglary)Last outcome category: Case outcome (e.g., investigation complete)LSOA name: Lower Super Output Area (small local area)Location: Approximate street or landmarkLatitude, Longitude: Coordinates for mappingOriginal source: https://data.police.uk/data/
This dataset is shared under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Attribution: Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Compiled and cleaned by @rahulladhani to support open ML exploration and public safety insights 🔍
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Part of Release: Official Sub-Ward, Ward and Borough level crime counts. This is the most accurate data available for counting numbers of crimes in London according to official recorded crime types, by the month the offence occurred, and by either borough, ward or sub ward location. The page contains the LSOA level file (Pre-2015 data in the 'archive' file) Click here for corresponding ward level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: Ward Level Click here for corresponding borough level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: Borough Level ‘Sub-Ward data’ counts the number of crimes in each sub ward area of London (Census Lower Super Output Area or LSOA) per month according to crime type. Use this data if you need to analyse crime data at a sub ward level. Because not all crimes can be matched to a specific LSOA area, you should not use this data set to count crimes by ward or borough. For these purposes use one of the other datasets according to the level of geographic precision you need. The categories of crime counts within them may change from time to time. Below is a list of the crime types you can currently extract (*only at borough or ward level): Minor Category: Major Category Murder: ViolenceAgainstThePerson CommonAssault: ViolenceAgainstThePerson OffensiveWeapon: ViolenceAgainstThePerson Harassment: ViolenceAgainstThePerson Otherviolence: ViolenceAgainstThePerson AssaultWithInjury: ViolenceAgainstThePerson WoundingGBH: ViolenceAgainstThePerson PersonalProperty: Robbery BusinessProperty: Robbery BurglaryInADwelling: Burglary BurglaryInOtherBuildings: Burglary TheftOrTakingOfMotor: TheftAndHandling TheftFromMotor: TheftAndHandling MotorInterferenceAndTampering: TheftAndHandling TheftFromShops: TheftAndHandling TheftOrTakingOfPedalCycles: TheftAndHandling OtherTheftPerson: TheftAndHandling OtherTheft: TheftAndHandling HandlingStolenGoods: TheftAndHandling CriminalDamageToADwelling: CriminalDamage CriminalDamageToOtherBldg: CriminalDamage CriminalDamageToMotor: CriminalDamage OtherCriminalDamage: CriminalDamage DrugTrafficking: Drugs PossessionOfDrugs: Drugs OtherDrugOffences: Drugs GoingEquipped: OtherNotifiableOffences OtherNotifiable: OtherNotifiableOffences (NB. no Sexual Offences data is included at LSOA level for disclosure purposes) Each row of data in the data sets contains: *The number of incidents according to the Month Recorded, the specific crime type, and the Location *The Month Recorded *The broad crime type (Major HO category – eg Robbery) *The specific crime type (Minor HO category – eg Robbery: Personal Property) *The Location (Sub –Ward, Ward or borough depending on the data set selected)
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TwitterImportant information: detailed data on crimes recorded by the police from April 2002 onwards are published in the police recorded crime open data tables. As such, from July 2016 data on crimes recorded by the police from April 2002 onwards are no longer published on this webpage. This is because the data is available in the police recorded crime open data tables which provide a more detailed breakdown of crime figures by police force area, offence code and financial year quarter. Data for Community Safety Partnerships are also available.
The open data tables are updated every three months to incorporate any changes such as reclassifications or crimes being cancelled or transferred to another police force, which means that they are more up-to-date than the tables published on this webpage which are updated once per year. Additionally, the open data tables are in a format designed to be user-friendly and enable analysis.
If you have any concerns about the way these data are presented please contact us by emailing CrimeandPoliceStats@homeoffice.gov.uk. Alternatively, please write to
Home Office Crime and Policing Analysis
1st Floor, Peel Building
2 Marsham Street
London
SW1P 4DF
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Crime incident counts and rates per million passenger journeys broken down by transport type.
This data is sourced from the TFL Open Datastore and reconstructed into a more user-friendly format.
metadata.csv contains all relevant information about how the data is sourced, collected, and distributed.
Notes:
*Underground rates and volume numbers include DLR (Docklands Light Railway) through March 2017.
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TwitterCity Of London full crime rankings and individual crime statistics updated monthly. See how safe City Of London is as well as all recent crimes.
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TwitterThis release is intended to provide transparency into those eligible for the Mayor of London Office for Police and Crime (MOPAC) GPS knife crime pilot. The bulletin presents information on individuals convicted of knife crime offences in London and is split into two datasets to provide full coverage of those eligible.
The ad hoc was produced and handled by the ministry’s analytical professionals and production staff. For the ad hoc pre-release access of up to 24 hours is granted to the following persons:
| Deputy Director of Data and Statistics Prisons, Probation and Reoffending and Head of Profession for Statistics; Head of HMPPS Performance; Head of Community Performance; Senior Policy Advisor, Electronic Monitoring and Early Resolution Policy; Press Officer |
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TwitterThere were ******* theft offences recorded by the police in London in 2024/25, which was the highest amount of theft offences in the UK capital during this provided time period.
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TwitterTotal Notifiable Offence (TNO) data follows the Home Office counting rules for recorded crime (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/counting-rules-for-recorded-crime ). NB This data-set includes “Other Accepted Crime”, which are non-notifiable crimes and must be excluded when calculating a TNO total.
Source: Metropolitan Police Service via London Datastore Original data: https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/mps-monthly-crime-dahboard-data/ License: UK Open Government Licence v3.0 (https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/)
| Column Name | Description |
|---|---|
| Month_Year | Reporting month as a date (first day of month) in YYYY-MM-DD format—for example 2025-05-01. |
| Area Type | Geographic aggregation level; here always “Borough”, indicating data is at the London borough level. |
| Borough_SNT | Name of the Borough or Safer Neighbourhood Team (SNT) area—for example “Barking and Dagenham”. |
| Area name | Human-readable borough name (same as Borough_SNT) used for display and grouping. |
| Area code | ONS/ONS-style code for the borough (e.g. E09000002 for Barking and Dagenham). |
| Offence Group | High-level crime category (e.g. BURGLARY, VIOLENCE AGAINST THE PERSON). |
| Offence Subgroup | More detailed crime category under each group (e.g. BURGLARY - RESIDENTIAL, THEFT FROM A VEHICLE). |
| Measure | Whether the row shows “Offences” (all reports) or “Positive Outcomes” (where an outcome was recorded). |
| Financial Year | Financial year code (e.g. fy25-26), matching UK fiscal year April–March. |
| FY_FYIndex | Financial year plus period index (e.g. 25-26_01 for the first month of FY25-26). |
| Count | Number of incidents (offences or positive outcomes) recorded for that month, area, and crime type. |
| Refresh Date | Date when this dataset was last updated in the source (YYYY-MM-DD). |
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TwitterThere were ****** robbery offences recorded by the police in London in 2024/25, compared with ****** in the previous reporting year, the peak for robbery offences in London during the provided time period.
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TwitterThis dataset provides a complete snapshot of crime, outcome, and stop and search data, as held by the Home Office from late 2014 through mid 2017 for London, both the greater metro and the city.
The core fields are as follows:
Reported by: The force that provided the data about the crime.
Falls within: At present, also the force that provided the data about the crime. This is currently being looked into and is likely to change in the near future.
Longitude and Latitude: The anonymised coordinates of the crime.
LSOA code and LSOA name: References to the Lower Layer Super Output Area that the anonymised point falls into, according to the LSOA boundaries provided by the Office for National Statistics.
Crime type: One of the crime types listed in the Police.UK FAQ.
Last outcome category: A reference to whichever of the outcomes associated with the crime occurred most recently. For example, this crime's 'Last outcome category' would be 'Offender fined'.
Context: A field provided for forces to provide additional human-readable data about individual crimes. Currently, for newly added CSVs, this is always empty.
For additional details, including the steps taken to anonymize the data, please see https://data.police.uk/about/#provenance.
This dataset was kindly released by the British Home Office under the Open Government License 3.0 at https://data.police.uk/data/. If you are looking for more data, they cover much more than London! All major cities in England and Wales are available, adding up to roughly 2gb of new data per month.
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London is the capital and most populous city of England and the United Kingdom. Standing on the River Thames in the south east of the island of Great Britain, London has been a major settlement for two millennia. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London
This data counts the number of crimes at two different geographic levels of London (LSOA and borough) by year, according to crime type. Includes data from 2008 to present. Crime categories are included in the BigQuery table description.
Fork this kernel to get started with this dataset.
This dataset is publicly available for anyone to use under the following terms provided by the Dataset Source — http://www.data.gov/privacy-policy#data_policy — and is provided "AS IS" without any warranty, express or implied, from Google. Google disclaims all liability for any damages, direct or indirect, resulting from the use of the dataset.
Banner Photo by Luca Micheli from Unplash.
What is the change in the number of crime incidents from 2011 to 2016?
What were the top 3 crimes per borough in 2016?
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Crime in major metropolitan areas, such as London, occurs in distinct patterns. This data covers the number of criminal reports by month, LSOA borough, and major/minor category from Jan 2008-Dec 2016.
13M rows containing counts of criminal reports by month, LSOA borough, and major/minor category.
Txt file was pulled from Google Cloud Platform and converted to csv. Photo by James Sutton.
Are there seasonal or time-of-week/day changes in crime occurrences? Any boroughs where particular crimes are increasing or decreasing? Policy makers use this data to plan upcoming budgets and deployment--can you use previous year crime reports to reliably predict later trends? If you normalize by borough population, can you find any areas where crime is more or less likely?
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TwitterUnderstanding the evidence has been critical in supporting the development of the draft Police and Crime Plan. The overarching aim of this product is to provide an overview of the potential policing and crime challenges London can expect to encounter over the coming years and insights in how to respond effectively to these.
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TwitterNumber of crimes and crime rate by type of public transport, including bus, LU / DLR, London Overground, and London Tramlink. Monthly data released 3 months at a time at end of each quarter. The BTP is responsible for policing the rail network in London, including the TfL managed London Underground (LU), the Docklands Light Railway (DLR), London Tramlink and the London Overground (LO) services. Crime figures for the LU, DLR, London Tramlink and LO have been provided by the BTP. Crime figures for LU and DLR are reported together as these networks are policed by the same division of the BTP. The BTP only deals with crime relating to the rail and Tramlink network The MPS is responsible for policing the rest of London’s transport network, including the bus network. The figures reported for the bus network are based on official MPS figures for bus-related crime unless otherwise stated. There is no distinct category of ’bus crime’ in the MPS crime recording system. Recorded crime data is extracted from the MPS system using a complex query that searches all MPS crime for transport venue codes and those that have the word bus, bus stop, bus station and transport related words somewhere in the electronic case file. For this reason, some crimes that did not occur on the bus network will be included in the figures. This is different from the BTP as all crimes dealt with by the BTP and included on their crime recording system relate directly to the rail network. The crime volume and rate figures displayed by month are accurate according to the month they were extracted from police and TfL systems and are subject to revision due to late reporting of crimes and adjustment of crime and passenger figures. The full financial year total of figures will differ slightly as they will reflect the most accurate and up to date crime and passenger data available; hence the monthly figures here should not be used to generate full financial year totals. The adjusted financial year figures are published in the annual TfL Crime Statistics Bulletin available here. Data will be updated on a quarterly basis, showing monthly breakdowns of crime volume and rate of crime per million passenger journeys. The rate of crime per million passenger journeys is calculated by the dividing the volume of crimes by the number of passenger journeys multiplied by one million. A crime rate per million passenger journeys was unavailable for London Overground prior to April 2011 due to lack of accurate passenger journey information across the entire London Overground network. This dataset is included in the Greater London Authority's Night Time Observatory. Click here to find out more.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Numbers of recorded offences, and rates of offences per thousand population, by broad crime grouping, by financial year and borough.
Rate is given as per thousand population, and are calculated using mid-year population from the first part of the financial year eg For Financial year 2008-09, mid-year estimates for 2008 are used.
Offences: These are confirmed reports of crimes being committed. All data relates to "notifiable offences" - which are designated categories of crimes that all police forces in England and Wales are required to report to the Home Office
Crime rates are not available for Heathrow due to no population figures
Monthly crime data by borough and ward is available from the Met Police website, available around one month after month end.
The total number of recorded crimes per month is also shown. A fuller breakdown by 32 different types of crime is available on the MPS website.
There were changes to the police recorded crime classifications from April 2012. Therefore caution should be used when comparing sub-groups of crime figures from 2012/13 with earlier years.
Action Fraud have taken over the recording of fraud offences on behalf of individual police forces. This process began in April 2011 and was rolled out to all police forces by March 2013. Due to this change caution should be applied when comparing data over this transitional period and with earlier years.
Link to data on Met Police website.
Crime stats on ONS website
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TwitterCities Of London And Westminster, Westminster full crime rankings and individual crime statistics updated monthly. See how safe Cities Of London And Westminster, Westminster is as well as all recent crimes.
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TwitterE00166756, Westminster full crime rankings and individual crime statistics updated monthly. See how safe E00166756, Westminster is as well as all recent crimes.
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FBI National Incident-Based Reporting System (FBI NIBRS) crime data for London Police Department (City) in Ohio, including incidents, statistics, demographics, and detailed incident information.
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TwitterIn 2024/25, there were ****** burglary offences recorded in London, a decline when compared with the previous reporting year. During the provided time period, the reporting year with the most burglary offences recorded was 2018/19, when there were approximately ****** burglaries.