USACrimeMap

SeattleKing County

city

Seattle, Washington — the largest city in the Pacific Northwest. Patrolled by the Seattle Police Department (SPD).

Population 749,256Data range 2026-04-012026-06-13Source Seattle Police DepartmentUpdated 2026-05-20
Incidents
13,417
in the active snapshot
Arrests
0
0.0% of total
Severe
1,802
13.4% of total
Reports
0
0.0% of total
Peak hour
20:00
1,216 incidents
Overnight 22-06
2,957
22.0% of total

Map

13,417 incidents · MapLibre · OpenFreeMap
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Category breakdown

Property59.9%
8,033
Other21.5%
2,881
Violent13.4%
1,802
Drugs3.2%
435
Disorder2.0%
264
Service0.0%
2

Hour-of-day pattern

0003060912151821

Top incident types

Not Reportable to NIBRS
1,723
Theft From Motor Vehicle
1,459
Burglary/Breaking & Entering
1,254
Destruction/Damage/Vandalism of Property
1,013
All Other Larceny
867
Simple Assault
852
Motor Vehicle Theft
835
Shoplifting
652
Aggravated Assault
607
All Other Offenses
494
Theft of Motor Vehicle Parts or Accessories
418
Intimidation
397

Hotspot addresses12

REDACTED
2,358
-
321
26XX BLOCK OF SW BARTON ST
85
5XX BLOCK OF QUEEN ANNE AVE N
63
S JACKSON ST / 12TH AVE S
56
38XX BLOCK OF RAINIER AVE S
36
14XX BLOCK OF E JOHN ST
36
14XX BLOCK OF BROADWAY
34
132XX BLOCK OF AURORA AVE N
33
5XX BLOCK OF 15TH AVE E
33
26XX BLOCK OF NE UNIVERSITY VILLAGE ST
32
9XX BLOCK OF NW 45TH ST
31

Recent activity10

All Other Offenses
95XX BLOCK OF ASHWORTH AVE N
23:57
06-13
Motor Vehicle Theft
132XX BLOCK OF AURORA AVE N
23:16
06-13
Robbery
14XX BLOCK OF 3RD AVE
18:34
06-13
All Other Larceny
8XX BLOCK OF NE NORTHGATE WAY
18:30
06-13
Drug/Narcotic Violations
E REPUBLICAN ST / HARVARD AVE E
17:08
06-13
All Other Larceny
71XX BLOCK OF 8TH AVE NE
17:00
06-13
Not Reportable to NIBRS
83XX BLOCK OF WABASH AVE S
16:25
06-13
Not Reportable to NIBRS
104XX BLOCK OF 39TH AVE SW
16:08
06-13
Impersonation
85XX BLOCK OF 15TH AVE NW
15:28
06-13
All Other Offenses
19XX BLOCK OF PIKE PL
15:15
06-13

FBI UCR context (2022) — Washington

State-level annual rates from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program. Independent of our calls-for-service data; included for context.

Violent crime
331
per 100k residents
Property crime
2833
per 100k residents
Homicide
4.98
per 100k residents
Annual homicides
388
absolute count, 2022

About this page

This page tracks 13,417 calls-for-service recorded in Seattle, King County during the active data snapshot (2026-04-01 → 2026-06-13). The largest single category is property, accounting for about 60% of all dispatches. not reportable to nibrs is the most common specific type.

Officers logged an arrest in 0.0% of these dispatches, with a written report filed in 0.0%. The remainder were resolved as routine matters, referrals, or with no further action needed. Activity peaks around 20:00; the most-recurring single address is REDACTED.

Calls-for-service like these are dispatch records, not adjudicated outcomes. Seattle Police Department remains the system of record. If you need to verify a specific case, contact the originating agency directly. Data on this page refreshes automatically each time we re-ingest the upstream feed.

Frequently asked questions

What does this Seattle crime map show?
It shows 13,417 public-safety calls-for-service recorded by Seattle Police Department in Seattle. Each call records that an officer was dispatched to a location — not that a crime was confirmed.
Are these confirmed crimes?
No. A call-for-service is a dispatch record. Many calls resolve as unfounded, civil matters, or routine community contact. Only an investigation and prosecution determines whether a crime occurred.
When is Seattle busiest for police calls?
In the current snapshot, the busiest hour is around 20:00 with 1,216 dispatches recorded in that hour. The 22:00–06:00 overnight window accounts for 2,957 calls.
What types of incidents are most common in Seattle?
In the current snapshot the three most frequent types are not reportable to nibrs, theft from motor vehicle, burglary/breaking & entering. These are not necessarily the most serious — most calls are service or traffic-related, and our category bar lets you filter by violent, property, medical, traffic, disorder, drugs, suspicious, or service.
How often is the data updated?
Seattle Police Department refreshes its public file daily. We re-ingest each refresh and republish here within minutes.
Where does the data come from?
Directly from the Seattle Police Department's public open-data feed. Data: City of Seattle Open Data (Seattle Police Department). Reported offences. Locations are blurred to the block level. Original feed: https://data.seattle.gov/Public-Safety/SPD-Crime-Data-2008-Present/tazs-3rd5.
Does this map show names of people involved?
No. Even if the upstream feed includes names, we strip them on ingest and never display them. We never republish booking photos. If you need verified record information, contact the originating agency.
Is Seattle a safe place to live?
That question depends on far more than dispatch counts — neighbourhoods within the same city can vary widely, and call volume reflects police activity as much as underlying conditions. Use this map as one signal among many, alongside King County and statewide statistics, local news, and direct agency contact. We do not characterise places as "safe" or "dangerous".
Can I get an alert when a call happens at my address?
Saved-address alerts are coming with our Pro plan. Until then, this page will always update automatically when the upstream feed refreshes.
How do I request a correction or removal?
Use our correction request page. The originating agency remains the system of record — if the agency corrects or suppresses a record at the source, our next ingestion reflects the change automatically.

Browse nearby

Up: King County
Up: Washington

Crime by category in Seattle

Source: Seattle Police Department. Data: City of Seattle Open Data (Seattle Police Department). Reported offences. Locations are blurred to the block level. Original feed. Last ingested: 2026-05-20 12:38 UTC. Updated by the agency daily. Calls-for-service represent dispatched responses, not verified crimes.