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Safest Places to Live in the UK 2026

Finding a safe place to live is one of the biggest concerns for anyone moving to a new area. We have ranked 50 of the UK's most popular towns and cities using crime data from Police.uk, covering every recorded offence from the past 12 months. Each location receives a safety score out of 100 based on its crime rate per 1,000 residents, the direction of crime trends, and the severity of offences recorded.

The national average crime rate across England and Wales sits at roughly 75 crimes per 1,000 people per year. Towns and cities that score well on our list sit significantly below that average. Scroll down to see the full rankings, methodology breakdown, and practical tips for researching safety in any area.

Complete Safety Rankings: 50 UK Towns and Cities

Ranked by crime rate per 1,000 residents (lowest first). Data sourced from Police.uk recorded crime statistics for the 12 months to January 2026. Click any town name to see the full area report with detailed crime breakdowns.

#Town / CityCrime RateScore
1HarrogateYorkshire and The Humber38.2/ 1k
92
2WinchesterSouth East40.1/ 1k
91
3BathSouth West42.7/ 1k
90
4CheltenhamSouth West44.3/ 1k
89
5SalisburySouth West45.1/ 1k
88
6LancasterNorth West46.8/ 1k
87
7YorkYorkshire and The Humber47.2/ 1k
87
8CambridgeEast of England48.9/ 1k
86
9EdinburghScotland49.3/ 1k
85
10OxfordSouth East50.1/ 1k
85
11CanterburySouth East51.4/ 1k
84
12ExeterSouth West52.3/ 1k
83
13ChesterNorth West53.1/ 1k
83
14CarlisleNorth West54.2/ 1k
82
15NorwichEast of England55.8/ 1k
81
16ColchesterEast of England56.3/ 1k
80
17LincolnEast Midlands57.1/ 1k
80
18AberdeenScotland57.9/ 1k
79
19ReadingSouth East58.4/ 1k
79
20BristolSouth West59.7/ 1k
78
21IpswichEast of England60.2/ 1k
77
22BournemouthSouth West61.3/ 1k
77
23SwanseaWales62.1/ 1k
76
24CardiffWales62.8/ 1k
76
25PlymouthSouth West63.4/ 1k
75
26GlasgowScotland63.9/ 1k
74
27BrightonSouth East64.5/ 1k
74
28LeicesterEast Midlands65.2/ 1k
73
29SouthamptonSouth East66.1/ 1k
73
30PortsmouthSouth East66.8/ 1k
72
31DundeeScotland67.3/ 1k
72
32PeterboroughEast of England68.1/ 1k
71
33Milton KeynesSouth East68.7/ 1k
71
34DerbyEast Midlands69.4/ 1k
70
35GloucesterSouth West70.2/ 1k
70
36NorthamptonEast Midlands71.3/ 1k
69
37CoventryWest Midlands72.5/ 1k
68
38Newcastle upon TyneNorth East73.1/ 1k
68
39LeedsYorkshire and The Humber74.8/ 1k
67
40Stoke-on-TrentWest Midlands75.6/ 1k
66
41SheffieldYorkshire and The Humber76.3/ 1k
65
42WolverhamptonWest Midlands77.8/ 1k
64
43SunderlandNorth East78.4/ 1k
63
44LiverpoolNorth West79.6/ 1k
62
45HullYorkshire and The Humber80.3/ 1k
61
46NottinghamEast Midlands82.1/ 1k
60
47BradfordYorkshire and The Humber84.5/ 1k
58
48ManchesterNorth West87.3/ 1k
56
49BirminghamWest Midlands89.7/ 1k
54
50LondonLondon93.4/ 1k
52

Crime rate is expressed as total recorded offences per 1,000 residents per year. Safety score is calculated on a 0-100 scale. Data from Police.uk and ONS mid-year population estimates.

How We Calculate Safety Scores

Our safety scores are designed to give you a clear, comparable number for each area. Rather than simply listing raw crime figures, we normalise the data by population size and weight different factors to produce a meaningful score. Here is exactly how it works:

70%

Crime Rate per 1,000

The total number of recorded crimes divided by the resident population, then multiplied by 1,000. This is the primary metric because it accounts for population differences between a small town like Harrogate and a large city like London.

20%

Crime Trend Direction

We compare the most recent 12 months against the previous 12 months. Areas where crime is falling receive a bonus, while areas with rising crime receive a penalty. This ensures areas that are improving are recognised, even if their absolute rate is still above average.

10%

Crime Severity Mix

Not all crimes are equal. An area with mostly low-level anti-social behaviour is objectively safer than one with the same total rate but higher proportions of violent crime, robbery, or sexual offences. We apply severity weightings from the ONS Crime Severity Score.

All crime data comes from Police.uk, which publishes monthly street-level crime and outcome data for every police force in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Scottish crime data comes from Police Scotland's published statistics. Population figures use ONS mid-year estimates to ensure rates are calculated against the most accurate resident counts available.

One important caveat: crime data only captures reported and recorded crime. The Crime Survey for England and Wales estimates that around 40% of crime goes unreported. This means our rankings are a reflection of recorded crime patterns rather than a complete picture. However, because underreporting affects all areas to some degree, relative comparisons between areas remain valid and useful.

Safest Cities vs Safest Towns

There is a significant gap between the safety profiles of large cities and smaller towns. Across our dataset, the average crime rate for cities with over 200,000 residents is 69.8 per 1,000, compared to 54.2 per 1,000 for smaller towns. That said, several cities perform remarkably well, often thanks to strong community policing and lower levels of deprivation.

Safest Large Cities (200,000+ population)

1
York

Yorkshire and The Humber · Pop. 211k

47.2/ 1k
2
Edinburgh

Scotland · Pop. 528k

49.3/ 1k
3
Bristol

South West · Pop. 472k

59.7/ 1k
4
Swansea

Wales · Pop. 247k

62.1/ 1k
5
Cardiff

Wales · Pop. 369k

62.8/ 1k
6
Plymouth

South West · Pop. 264k

63.4/ 1k
7
Glasgow

Scotland · Pop. 636k

63.9/ 1k
8
Brighton

South East · Pop. 291k

64.5/ 1k
9
Leicester

East Midlands · Pop. 369k

65.2/ 1k
10
Southampton

South East · Pop. 253k

66.1/ 1k

Safest Smaller Towns (under 200,000)

1
Harrogate

Yorkshire and The Humber · Pop. 75k

38.2/ 1k
2
Winchester

South East · Pop. 45k

40.1/ 1k
3
Bath

South West · Pop. 95k

42.7/ 1k
4
Cheltenham

South West · Pop. 119k

44.3/ 1k
5
Salisbury

South West · Pop. 46k

45.1/ 1k
6
Lancaster

North West · Pop. 52k

46.8/ 1k
7
Cambridge

East of England · Pop. 146k

48.9/ 1k
8
Oxford

South East · Pop. 162k

50.1/ 1k
9
Canterbury

South East · Pop. 164k

51.4/ 1k
10
Exeter

South West · Pop. 130k

52.3/ 1k

Key Observations

  • Harrogate tops the overall list with just 38.2 crimes per 1,000 residents. Its affluent demographic, strong community policing, and low deprivation levels all contribute to its consistently low crime rate.
  • Winchester is the safest city with a rate of 40.1 per 1,000, making it comparable to much smaller towns. Its compact size and cathedral city character help keep crime well below the city average.
  • Edinburgh outperforms most English cities at 49.3 per 1,000, ranking 9th overall despite being a major capital city with over 500,000 residents. Scotland's distinct policing approach through Police Scotland appears to contribute.
  • The South West dominates the top 10, with Bath, Cheltenham, Salisbury, and Exeter all featuring. The region consistently records lower crime rates than the national average.
  • Crime trends matter. Glasgow ranks 26th overall but has a "falling" crime trend, meaning it is actively improving. Conversely, some towns with lower absolute rates have "rising" trends worth watching.

Tips for Researching Area Safety

Crime statistics are a useful starting point, but the safest-feeling areas are not always the ones with the lowest numbers on paper. Here are practical steps to properly assess safety before committing to a move:

1. Check Street-Level Crime Maps

Crime rates can vary dramatically within the same town. A city centre postcode might have three times the crime rate of a suburb just two miles away. Use our postcode checker to see crime data for specific streets, not just town-wide averages. Police.uk also provides a free interactive crime map where you can explore individual streets.

2. Visit at Different Times

Walk around the area during the day and after dark. Visit on a weekday and at the weekend. Some areas feel completely different on a Friday night compared to a Tuesday morning. Pay attention to street lighting, the condition of public spaces, and whether people seem comfortable walking around. Talk to locals at shops, cafes, or community centres; they will give you honest insights that no dataset can capture.

3. Look Beyond Crime Categories

A high total crime count does not always mean an area is dangerous to live in. Anti-social behaviour, shoplifting, and vehicle crime inflate totals but have very different implications for personal safety compared to violent crime or robbery. When reviewing data, focus on violence against the person, burglary, and robbery figures rather than the headline total. Our area reports break crime down by category so you can see exactly what types of offences are recorded.

4. Check Crime Trends, Not Just Snapshots

An area with a slightly higher crime rate but a falling trend may be a better long-term bet than one with a lower rate that is creeping upward. Regeneration areas in particular often start with higher crime but improve rapidly over 3-5 years. Our rankings include trend data for this reason. New housing developments, improved transport links, and investment in community facilities are all positive indicators.

5. Consider the Wider Liveability Picture

Safety is one piece of the puzzle. The best places to live combine low crime with good schools, reliable transport, affordable housing, access to green space, and strong community networks. An area that scores highly for safety but poorly for everything else might not be the right fit. Use our full area reports to weigh up all the factors together. Enter any UK postcode on our homepage to get the complete picture.

6. Use Multiple Data Sources

No single data source tells the full story. Cross-reference crime data with the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD), which measures poverty, education, and health outcomes in an area. Areas that rank well on both crime and IMD tend to have stronger, more resilient communities. Our area reports include IMD data alongside crime figures for exactly this reason.

Safety by Region: Where Does the UK Perform Best?

Regional differences in crime are significant. The South West and South East consistently record lower crime rates, while parts of the North and West Midlands tend to sit above the national average. However, every region has both safe and higher-crime areas, so it is always worth checking specific towns rather than assuming a whole region is safe or unsafe.

South West

55.8/ 1k avg

Bath, Cheltenham, Salisbury, Exeter

Consistently the safest region overall

South East

58.2/ 1k avg

Winchester, Canterbury, Reading

Strong performance despite high population

East of England

57.4/ 1k avg

Cambridge, Norwich, Colchester

Low crime with good transport links

Scotland

59.6/ 1k avg

Edinburgh, Aberdeen, Dundee

Edinburgh stands out as exceptionally safe for its size

Yorkshire and The Humber

68.2/ 1k avg

Harrogate, York, Leeds

Huge variation; Harrogate is UK's safest, but larger cities score lower

North West

67.5/ 1k avg

Lancaster, Chester, Carlisle

Smaller towns are very safe; cities bring the average up

Wales

62.5/ 1k avg

Cardiff, Swansea

Below-average crime rates across most areas

East Midlands

68.3/ 1k avg

Lincoln, Leicester, Derby

Mixed; Lincoln performs well, Nottingham less so

West Midlands

74.1/ 1k avg

Coventry, Wolverhampton, Stoke-on-Trent

Higher than average; Birmingham pulls the region up

North East

75.8/ 1k avg

Newcastle, Sunderland

Above average, though crime has been falling in several areas

London

93.4/ 1k avg

London (overall)

Highest crime rate but enormous variation by borough

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Frequently Asked Questions

How are safety scores calculated?

Safety scores are calculated on a 0-100 scale using crime data from Police.uk. The primary factor is the total crime rate per 1,000 residents, which accounts for 70% of the score. The remaining 30% comes from crime trend direction (falling, stable, or rising) and the severity mix of crime types. Anti-social behaviour and violent crime are weighted more heavily than low-level offences.

What is a good crime rate per 1,000 population?

The national average crime rate across England and Wales is approximately 75 crimes per 1,000 residents per year. Anything below 50 per 1,000 is considered very low, and areas below 60 per 1,000 are generally regarded as safe. For context, the safest towns in the UK have rates around 38-45 per 1,000, while the highest-crime cities can exceed 90 per 1,000.

Is the countryside always safer than cities?

Not necessarily. While rural areas typically have lower crime rates overall, they can have higher rates of certain crime types like rural theft, agricultural crime, and burglary of isolated properties. Additionally, rural areas often have longer police response times. Smaller towns and market towns tend to offer the best balance of low crime rates with good police coverage and community safety.

How often is the crime data updated?

Police.uk publishes crime data monthly, typically with a two-month delay. For example, January crime figures usually become available in March. Our safety scores are recalculated each time new data is published, so rankings may shift slightly from month to month. We also track 12-month rolling trends to smooth out seasonal variations.

Do these rankings account for unreported crime?

No. These rankings use reported crime data from Police.uk, which only captures offences that are recorded by police forces. The Crime Survey for England and Wales estimates that roughly 40% of crime goes unreported. However, reported crime data remains the most consistent and comparable measure across different areas, making it the most reliable basis for area-to-area comparisons.

Should I choose where to live based on crime data alone?

Crime data is important but should be one of several factors in your decision. Quality of schools, transport links, property prices, local amenities, employment opportunities, and community feel all matter. Use our full area reports (enter any postcode on PostcodeCheck) to see the complete picture, including broadband speeds, flood risk, energy efficiency, and more.

Check Any Postcode District

Browse detailed area reports for every postcode district across 50 UK towns and cities. Click any outcode to see crime, schools, property prices, broadband, and more.

London325 districts
Manchester78 districts
Birmingham107 districts
Leeds51 districts
Glasgow85 districts
Liverpool75 districts
Bristol39 districts
Sheffield84 districts
Edinburgh57 districts
Cardiff39 districts
Newcastle upon Tyne76 districts
Nottingham31 districts
Brighton37 districts
Oxford26 districts
Cambridge16 districts
Bath19 districts
York30 districts
Exeter33 districts
Norwich36 districts
Coventry24 districts
Leicester26 districts
Southampton23 districts
Portsmouth35 districts
Plymouth36 districts
Reading30 districts
Derby24 districts
Swansea53 districts
Aberdeen34 districts
Dundee11 districts
Wolverhampton18 districts
Stoke-on-Trent22 districts
Sunderland9 districts
Hull20 districts
Bradford43 districts
Cheltenham7 districts
Gloucester20 districts
Chester51 districts
Canterbury22 districts
Winchester2 districts
Salisbury11 districts
Peterborough36 districts
Ipswich34 districts
Lincoln13 districts
Carlisle29 districts
Lancaster23 districts
Bournemouth37 districts
Milton Keynes27 districts
Northampton19 districts
Colchester16 districts
Harrogate5 districts