USACrimeMap
Traffic

Traffic incidents in San FranciscoCalifornia

Traffic incidents (crashes, DUI, reckless driving, hit-and-run). Live data for 2026 drawn from the San Francisco Police Department open feed. Snapshot covers 2026-04-012026-06-04.

Traffic incidents
87
in the active snapshot
Arrests
32
36.8% of category total
Severe
0
0.0% of category total
Peak hour
22:00
8 dispatches

Hour-of-day pattern

0003060912151821

Top traffic types

Evading a Police Officer Recklessly
65
Driving, Reckless
21
Driving, Reckless, with Injury
1

Top traffic hotspots

14TH ST \ HARRISON ST
3
07TH ST \ MISSION ST
3
08TH ST \ MISSION ST
3
EDDY ST \ HYDE ST
3
06TH ST \ HARRISON ST
2
20TH AVE \ BUCKINGHAM WAY \ WINSTON DR
2
16TH ST \ WIESE ST
2
11TH ST \ BURNS PL
2
08TH ST \ BRANNAN ST
2
18TH ST \ SHOTWELL ST
2
Full crime map
San Francisco — all categories →
All incident categories on one filterable map.
Address-level
Safety check for any San Francisco address →
Type any street; see incidents within walking distance.

Other categories in San Francisco

Frequently asked questions

How much traffic incidents is there in San Francisco?
In the active data snapshot we have 87 traffic incidents incidents recorded in San Francisco between 2026-04-01 and 2026-06-04. 0 of those (0.0%) were classified as severe. These are calls-for-service, not adjudicated crimes.
What time of day is traffic incidents most common in San Francisco?
The peak hour for traffic incidents in the snapshot is 22:00 local time, with 8 dispatches recorded in that hour.
Where does this traffic incidents data come from?
San Francisco Police Department's open data feed. Data: DataSF (San Francisco Police Department). Reported incidents — not arrests. Coordinates are approximated to the block level.
How recent is this data?
San Francisco Police Department refreshes its public file daily. We re-ingest each refresh and republish here within minutes.
Source: San Francisco Police Department. Data: DataSF (San Francisco Police Department). Reported incidents — not arrests. Coordinates are approximated to the block level. Calls-for-service represent dispatched responses, not verified crimes.