USACrimeMap
Drugs

Drug crimes in MiamiFlorida

Drug-related crimes (narcotics, controlled substances). Live data for 2026 drawn from the City of Miami Police Department open feed. Snapshot covers 2026-05-032026-06-06.

Drugs incidents
1,425
in the active snapshot
Arrests
0
0.0% of category total
Severe
0
0.0% of category total
Peak hour
16:00
175 dispatches

Hour-of-day pattern

0003060912151821

Top drugs types

Drug/Narcotic Violations
844
Drug Equipment Violations
581

Top drugs hotspots

NW 1ST PL / NW 12TH ST
37
NW 21ST AV / NW 24TH ST
32
GRAND AV / ELIZABETH ST
30
NW 1ST AV / NW 10TH ST
30
400 BLOCK OF SW 2ND AVE
29
NW 2ND AV / NW 9TH ST
24
400 BLOCK OF NW 2ND AVE
22
NW 19TH AV / W FLAGLER ST
20
3100 BLOCK OF BISCAYNE BLVD
20
N MIAMI AV / NW 79TH ST
20
Full crime map
Miami — all categories →
All incident categories on one filterable map.
Address-level
Safety check for any Miami address →
Type any street; see incidents within walking distance.

Other categories in Miami

Frequently asked questions

How much drug crime is there in Miami?
In the active data snapshot we have 1,425 drug crime incidents recorded in Miami between 2026-05-03 and 2026-06-06. 0 of those (0.0%) were classified as severe. These are calls-for-service, not adjudicated crimes.
What time of day is drug crime most common in Miami?
The peak hour for drug crime in the snapshot is 16:00 local time, with 175 dispatches recorded in that hour.
Where does this drug crime data come from?
City of Miami Police Department's open data feed. Data: City of Miami Police Department, via City of Miami Open Data GIS (datahub-miamigis.opendata.arcgis.com). Reported NIBRS crimes — not arrests or convictions. Address precision is block-level.
How recent is this data?
City of Miami Police Department refreshes its public file near-daily. We re-ingest each refresh and republish here within minutes.
Source: City of Miami Police Department. Data: City of Miami Police Department, via City of Miami Open Data GIS (datahub-miamigis.opendata.arcgis.com). Reported NIBRS crimes — not arrests or convictions. Address precision is block-level. Calls-for-service represent dispatched responses, not verified crimes.