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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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Recorded crime figures for CSP areas. Number of offences for the last two years, percentage change, and rates per 1,000 population for the latest year.
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Police recorded crime figures by Police Force Area and Community Safety Partnership areas (which equate in the majority of instances, to local authorities).
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TwitterWith approximately 122.1 crimes per 1,000 population, Cleveland, in North East England, had the highest crime rate of all the police force areas in England and Wales in 2024/25. High crime rates are evident in other areas of northern England, such as West Yorkshire and Greater Manchester at 114.5 and 108.2, respectively. In the UK capital, London, the crime rate was 105.5 per 1,000 people. The lowest crime rate in England was in the relatively rural areas of Wiltshire in South West England, as well as North Yorkshire. Overall crime in England and Wales The number of crimes in England and Wales reached approximately 6.74 million in 2022/23, falling slightly to 6.66 million in 2023/24, and 6.59 million in 2024/25. Overall crime has been rising steadily across England and Wales for almost a decade, even when adjusted for population rises. In 2022/23, for example, the crime rate in England and Wales was 93.6, the highest since 2006/07. When compared with the rest of the United Kingdom, England and Wales is something of an outlier, as crime rates for Scotland and Northern Ireland have not followed the same trajectory of rising crime. Additionally, there has been a sharp increase in violent crimes and sexual offences since the mid-2010s in England and Wales. While theft offences have generally been falling, the number of shoplifting offences reached a peak of 530,640 in 2024/25. Troubled justice system under pressure Alongside rising crime figures, many indicators also signal that the justice system is getting pushed to breaking point. The percentage of crimes that are solved in England and Wales was just 5.7 percent in 2023, with sexual offences having a clearance rate of just 3.6 percent. Crimes are also taking far longer than usual to pass through the justice system. In 2022, it took an average of 407 days for a crown court case to reach a conclusion from the time of the offence, compared with 233 days in 2018. This is most likely related to the large backlog of cases in crown courts, which reached over 67,750 in 2023. Furthermore, prisons in England and Wales are dangerously overcrowded, with the government even releasing some prisoners early to address the issue.
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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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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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Part of Release: Official Sub-Ward, Ward and Borough level crime counts.
Choose from the three data sets (‘Sub-Ward data’, ‘Ward data’ or ‘Borough data’) according to your requirements.
This page contains the ward level data files
Click here for corresponding LSOA level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: LSOA Level
Click here for corresponding ward level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: Ward Level
Choose from the three data sets (‘Sub-Ward data’, ‘Ward data’ or ‘Borough data’) according to your requirements.
‘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.
‘Ward data’ counts the number of crimes in each ward area of London per month, according to crime type. Use this data if you need to analyse crime data according to the location of geographic wards. Because not all crimes can be matched to a ward area, you should not use this data set to count crimes by borough. For this purpose use one of the Borough level dataset provided.
‘Borough data’ counts the number of crimes in each borough area of London per month, according to crime type.
Each of the data sets will contain the latest two years of data available. 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
*Rape: SexualOffences
*OtherSexual: SexualOffences
PersonalProperty: Robbery
BusinessProperty: Robbery
BurglaryInADwelling: Burglary
BurglaryInOtherBuildings: Burglary
TheftOrTakingOfMotor: TheftAndHandling
TheftFromMotor: TheftAndHandling
MotorInterferenceAndTampering: TheftAndHandling
TheftFromShops: TheftAndHandling
TheftOrTakingOfPedalCycles: TheftAndHandling
OtherTheftPerson: TheftAndHandling
OtherTheft: TheftAndHandling
HandlingStolenGoods: TheftAndHandling
*CountedPerVictim: FraudOrForgery
*OtherFraudAndForgery: FraudOrForgery
CriminalDamageToADwelling: CriminalDamage
CriminalDamageToOtherBldg: CriminalDamage
CriminalDamageToMotor: CriminalDamage
OtherCriminalDamage: CriminalDamage
DrugTrafficking: Drugs
PossessionOfDrugs: Drugs
OtherDrugOffences: Drugs
GoingEquipped: OtherNotifiableOffences
OtherNotifiable: OtherNotifiableOffences
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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Crime Rates of offences per thousand population, by broad crime grouping, by financial year for wards. 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. Ward data should not be aggregated to give a borough or London total. This is because a small percentage (less than 5%) of crimes in this dataset have not been geocoded to a ward. Therefore total numbers and rates are indicative only, and are not an exact measure at ward level. The rate is calculated using ward GLA 2012-based (SHLAA) population projections, and population data calculated and constrained to 2012 Borough (SHLAA) projections. The London figure only includes the Met Police area, not the City of London. The London total includes all offences in the Met Police Area including those that could not be geocoded. Therefore the London total will not equal the sum of the wards. Some ward boundaries changed in 2014. From 2013/14 the data shown is for the new boundaries. This only affects Hackney, Kensington and Chelsea, and Tower Hamlets. From 2013/14, the numbers and rates for 2013 ward boundaries in Hackney, K&C and Tower Hamlets, have all been modelled based on the proportion of population living in each area at the 2011 Census. 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. Data by detailed crime group and month are available from the MPS website .
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TwitterThis data counts the number of crimes at three different geographic levels of London (borough, ward, LSOA) per month, according to crime type.
Data is available in two files for each level of geography - the most up to date data covering the last available 24 months only and one covering all historic full calendar years.
In March 2019, the Metropolitan Police Service started to provide offences grouped by the updated Home Office crime classifications . This currently only covers the most recent 24 months of data, but historic data using the previous categories is available separately back to January 2008.
Below is a list of the crime types covered under the new HO categories (*not available at LSOA level):
Major Category: Minor Category
Arson and Criminal Damage - Arson / Criminal Damage
Burglary: Burglary - Business and Community / Burglary - Residential*
Drug Offences: Drug Trafficking / Possession of Drugs
Miscellaneous Crimes Against Society: Absconding from Lawful Custody / Bail Offences / Bigamy / Concealing an Infant Death Close to Birth / Dangerous Driving / Disclosure, Obstruction, False or Misleading State / Exploitation of Prostitution / Forgery or Use of Drug Prescription / Fraud or Forgery Associated with Driver Records / Going Equipped for Stealing / Handling Stolen Goods / Making, Supplying or Possessing Articles for use i / Obscene Publications / Offender Management Act / Other Forgery / Other Notifiable Offences / Perjury / Perverting Course of Justice / Possession of False Documents / Profitting From or Concealing Proceeds of Crime / Soliciting for Prostitution / Threat or Possession With Intent to Commit Crimina / Wildlife Crime
Possession of Weapons: Other Firearm Offences / Possession of Firearm with Intent / Possession of Firearms Offences / Possession of Other Weapon / Possession of Article with Blade or Point
Public Order Offences: Other Offences Against the State, or Public Order / Public Fear Alarm or Distress / Racially or Religiously Aggravated Public Fear / Violent Disorder
Robbery: Robbery of Business Property / Robbery of Personal Property
Sexual Offences*: Rape, Other Sexual Offences
Theft: Bicycle Theft / Other Theft / Shoplifting / Theft from Person
Vehicle Offences: Aggravated Vehicle Taking / Interfering with a Motor Vehicle / Theft from a Motor Vehicle / Theft or Taking of a Motor Vehicle
Violence Against the Person: Homicide / Violence with Injury / Violence without Injury
To note:
Fraud data was transferred from individual police forces to National Action Fraud in March 2013
*Prior to April 2017, police recorded burglary offence categories were split such that dwellings (domestic burglary) and buildings other than dwellings (non-domestic burglary) were separately identifiable, where:
From April 2017 onwards a new classification of police recorded burglary was introduced, dividing offences into two categories of “residential” and “business and community”.
“Residential” burglary includes all buildings or parts of buildings that are within the boundary of, or form a part of, a dwelling and includes the dwelling itself, vacant dwellings, sheds, garages, outhouses, summer houses and any other structure that meets the definition of a building. It also includes other premises used for residential purposes such as houseboats, residential care homes and hostels.
“Business and community” burglary includes all buildings or parts of buildings that are used solely and exclusively for business purposes or are otherwise entirely outside the classification of residential burglary.
**As per data protection laws, Sexual Offences are not provided at the LSOA level.
NB Data uploaded to this area after February 2024 is sourced from the CONNECT system. Some measures\details previously provided may not be available in total or in part. Please take care when comparing data-sets posted after February 2024 with those posted prior.
Please note that there is a level of detail that cannot be translated between legacy system a
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Extract from GLA Release: Official Sub-Ward, Ward and Borough level crime counts. This page contains the ward level data file for London Borough of Barnet Click here for corresponding LSOA level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: LSOA Level Click here for corresponding Borough level data: Recorded Crime Summary Data for London: Borough Level ‘Ward data’ counts the number of crimes in each ward area of London Borough of Barnet per month, according to crime type. Use this data if you need to analyse crime data according to the location of geographic wards. Because not all crimes can be matched to a ward area, you should not use this data set to count crimes by borough. For this purpose use the Borough level dataset linked to above. ‘Borough data’ counts the number of crimes in each borough area of London per month, according to crime type. Each of the data sets will contain the latest two years of data available. 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 Rape: SexualOffences OtherSexual: SexualOffences PersonalProperty: Robbery BusinessProperty: Robbery BurglaryInADwelling: Burglary BurglaryInOtherBuildings: Burglary TheftOrTakingOfMotor: TheftAndHandling TheftFromMotor: TheftAndHandling MotorInterferenceAndTampering: TheftAndHandling TheftFromShops: TheftAndHandling TheftOrTakingOfPedalCycles: TheftAndHandling OtherTheftPerson: TheftAndHandling OtherTheft: TheftAndHandling HandlingStolenGoods: TheftAndHandling CountedPerVictim: FraudOrForgery OtherFraudAndForgery: FraudOrForgery CriminalDamageToADwelling: CriminalDamage CriminalDamageToOtherBldg: CriminalDamage CriminalDamageToMotor: CriminalDamage OtherCriminalDamage: CriminalDamage DrugTrafficking: Drugs PossessionOfDrugs: Drugs OtherDrugOffences: Drugs GoingEquipped: OtherNotifiableOffences OtherNotifiable: OtherNotifiableOffences 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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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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TwitterA sum of crime records by London Borough for 24 months to July 2021.
Taken from my dataset here.
Used in creating a heatmap in this notebook.
(The content is released under the UK Open Government License (OGL) 2.0 details of which can be found here).
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Raw data on crime supplied by the Metropolitan Police Service and the Mayors Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC).
Pan-London data includes:
- Total Notifiable Offences
- Total Victim-based crime (and Sanctioned Detection Rates)
- Violence against the Person
- Violence with injury (VWI)* (and SDR)
- Serious Youth Violence
- Female victims of robbery & Violence with Injury
- Rape
- Knife Crime (and SDR)
- Knife Crime with Injury
- Gun Crime (and SDR)
- Gun Crime with firearm discharged
- Gang violence indicator
- Dog Attacks (and SDR)
- Homicide
- Sexual Offences
- Burglary (all)
- Burglary (residential)
- Robbery (all)
- Theft & Handling
- Theft from Person*
- Theft of Motor Vehicle*
- Theft from Motor Vehicle*
- Criminal Damage*
- Domestic Offences
- Homophobic Hate Victims
- Racist & Religious Hate Victims
- Faith Hate Victims
- Disability Hate Victims
- Stop & Search Totals (and related Arrest rate)
- Police Strengths - Officer/Sergeant/Staff/Special Constable/PCSO
- Satisfaction/Confidence in the Metropolitan Police Service (ease of contact/satisfaction with action taken/well-informed/fairly treated/overall satisfaction/overall confidence) NB. Quarterly data
- Crime-related calls to Police by category
- Anti-Social Behaviour-related calls to Police by category Borough data includes:
- Fear of crime ("to what extent are you worried about crime in this area?") NB. Quarterly data
NB. Action Fraud have taken over the recording of fraud offences nationally on behalf of individual police forces. This process began in April 2011 and was rolled out to all police forces by March 2013. Data for Greater London is available from Action Fraud here.
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TwitterThis 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. This public dataset is hosted in Google BigQuery and is included in BigQuery's 1TB/mo of free tier processing. This means that each user receives 1TB of free BigQuery processing every month, which can be used to run queries on this public dataset. Watch this short video to learn how to get started quickly using BigQuery to access public datasets. What is BigQuery .
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Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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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TwitterThe report looks into the various drivers of social exclusion amongst older people (although many of these indicators are equally relevant amongst all age groups) and attempts to identify areas in London where susceptibility is particularly high. Six key drivers have been included with various indicators used in an attempt to measure these. The majority of these indicators are at Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) level in an effort to identify areas at as small a geography as possible. Key Driver Indicator Description Economic Situation Income deprivation Income Deprivation Affecting Older People Score from the 2015 Indices of Deprivation Transport Accessibility Public Transport Average Public Transport Accessibility Score Car access Percentage aged 65 and over with no cars or vans in household Household Ties One person households Percentage aged 65+ living alone Providing unpaid care Percentage aged 65+ providing 50 or more hours of unpaid care a week Neighbourhood Ties Proficiency in English Percent aged 65+ who cannot speak English well Churn Rate Churn Rate: (inflow+outflow) per 100 population Health Mental health Estimated prevalence of dementia amongst population aged 65 and over (%) General health Percentage aged 65+ with a limiting long-term health problem or disability Safety Fear of crime Percentage in borough worried about anti-social behaviour in area Percentage in borough who feel unsafe walking alone after dark Crime rates Total offences per 100 population
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Počet zaznamenaných trestných činů a počet trestných činů na tisíc obyvatel podle širokých skupin trestné činnosti, podle rozpočtového roku a obvodu.
Sazba se uvádí podle tisíců obyvatel a vypočítá se pomocí pololetního souboru z první části rozpočtového roku, např. pro rozpočtový rok 2008-09 se používají pololetní odhady pro rok 2008.
Útoky: To jsou potvrzené zprávy o páchaných zločinech. Všechny údaje se týkají "oznamovaných trestných činů" - což jsou určené kategorie trestných činů, které jsou všechny policejní síly v Anglii a Walesu povinny hlásit ministerstvu vnitra.
Měsíční údaje o kriminalitě podle čtvrtí a obvodů jsou k dispozici na webových stránkách Metropolitní policie, které jsou k dispozici přibližně jeden měsíc po konci měsíce.
Uvádí se také celkový počet zaznamenaných trestných činů za měsíc. Úplnější rozpis podle 32 různých druhů trestné činnosti je k dispozici na webových stránkách MPS.
Od dubna 2012 došlo ke změnám v klasifikaci trestných činů zaznamenaných policií.Proto je třeba při porovnávání údajů o podskupinách trestných činů z let 2012/13 s předchozími roky postupovat obezřetně.
Akční podvody převzaly evidenci trestných činů podvodu jménem jednotlivých policejních složek. Tento proces byl zahájen v dubnu 2011 a do března 2013 byl předán všem policejním složkám. Vzhledem k této změně je třeba při porovnávání údajů za toto přechodné období a s předchozími roky postupovat opatrně.
Odkaz na údaje na Internetové stránky policie.
Statistiky trestných činů na internetové stránky ONS
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TwitterThere were ***** firearm offences recorded in London 2023/24, compared with ***** in 2022/23. There was a noticeable drop in gun crime at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, with offences falling from ***** in 2019/20 to ***** in 2021/21, and ***** in 2021/22. This is also reflected in London's overall crime rate, which fell from ***** crimes per 1,000 people in 2019/20, to **** in 2020/21, before increasing to **** in 2021/22, and ***** in the most recent reporting year. Firearm homicides rare in the UK The United Kingdom has some of the strictest gun laws in the world, resulting in relatively low levels of gun crime and firearm homicides. In 2023/24 just *** percent of homicides in England and Wales were the result of shootings, compared with *****percent in the United States in 2023. The most common method of killing for homicides in England and Wales was by far the use of a sharp instrument, such as knife, at ** percent of homicides in the 2023/24 reporting year. London police budget cut in 2025/26 In 2025/26, the budget for policing in London was cut to **** billion pounds, from over **** billion in 2024/25. Prior to this, London's police budget increased for sixth-consecutive years, occurred alongside a recruitment drive for police officers, which had fallen to quite low levels in the mid 2010s. It is unlikely that the London policing budget will fall to as low as it did in the mid 2010s, when the budget was effectively frozen at around *** billion pounds a year between 2013/14 and 2018/19
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TwitterAs part of the quarterly release of Crime data and trends by the Office for National Statistics, data is released aggregated at police force level for the most recent rolling 12 months. The below interactive infographic allows you to click through the key crime indicators assessed to see how London (the Metropolitan Police Service) is performing compared to the rest of the country (using the same data from 12 months previously). Also included are the key performing London boroughs in each indicator during the period covered.
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Antal registrerede lovovertrædelser og antal lovovertrædelser pr. 1 000 indbyggere efter bred kriminel gruppering, efter regnskabsår og bydel.
Prisen angives pr. tusind indbyggere og beregnes ved hjælp af befolkningstallet midt på året fra første del af regnskabsåret, f.eks. For regnskabsåret 2008-09 anvendes skøn fra midten af året for 2008.
Overtrædelser:
Disse er bekræftede rapporter om forbrydelser, der begås. Alle data vedrører "anmeldelsespligtige lovovertrædelser" - som er udpegede kategorier af forbrydelser, som alle politistyrker i England og Wales skal indberette til indenrigsministeriet
Kriminalitetsrater er ikke tilgængelige for Heathrow på grund af ingen befolkningstal
Månedlige kriminalitetsdata efter bydel og afdeling er tilgængelige fra Met Police hjemmeside, tilgængelig omkring en måned efter månedens udgang.
Det samlede antal registrerede forbrydelser pr. måned vises også. En mere fuldstændig opdeling af 32 forskellige typer kriminalitet er tilgængelig på MPS-webstedet.
Der var ændringer i politiets registrerede kriminalitetsklassifikationer fra april 2012.Der bør derfor udvises forsigtighed ved sammenligning af undergrupper af kriminalitetstal fra 2012/13 med tidligere år.
Action Fraud har overtaget registreringen af svig på vegne af de enkelte politistyrker. Denne proces begyndte i april 2011 og blev rullet ud til alle politistyrker i marts 2013. På grund af denne ændring bør der udvises forsigtighed ved sammenligning af data over denne overgangsperiode og med tidligere år.
Link til data på Met Police website.
Kriminalitetsstatistik på ONS-websted
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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