Live Crime Tracker Shows Continued Major Crime Declines in 2024
John K. Roman
Kiegan Rice
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January 2025
Crime rates in major U.S. cities declined substantially in 2024, according to new data from NORC at the University of Chicago’s new Live Crime Tracker.
An analysis by NORC‘s Center on Public Safety & Justice reveals novel declines across multiple crime categories in 49 mid-sized and large U.S. cities. We find statistically significant* decreases in four of the eight traditional crime rate measures in 2024 when compared to 2023: homicide (20.9 percent), motor vehicle thefts (18.6 percent), burglary (16.8 percent), and larceny/theft (9.0 percent). Large decreases were also recorded in sex offenses (9.9 percent) and robbery (8.1 percent). Simple assaults declined slightly (1.9 percent), while aggravated assaults increased (3.2 percent).
The declines in crime in the United States are substantial compared to historical averages. The average annual change in total crime (up or down) between 1960 and 2022 was 4.3 percent. The average year-to-year changes in violent crime (4.5 percent) and property crime (4.4 percent) are similar.
The declines in multiple crime categories in 2024 continue five years of unprecedented changes in crime in the U.S. compared to historical norms. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), from 2019 to 2020, homicide increased by 28 percent, the largest one-year increase since 1960. In 2023, preliminary FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program data showed a 12.3 percent decline in homicides, the largest one-year decline since 1960 before 2024.
In July 2024, the center released a mid-year research brief reporting unprecedented declines across multiple crime categories in 49 mid-sized and large cities. Our full-year analysis is consistent with the findings in our mid-year brief.
Findings
Both property and violent crime continued to decline at an anomalous rate.
The Live Crime Tracker is a city panel that collects daily crime reports from the open records of 54 mid-sized and large U.S. cities. For this report 49 cities were included as some cities were removed from this analysis because their data was not available through the open data portal at the time of analysis (See methods section below for more details).
Using data from the Live Crime Tracker, we find that both property and violent crime declined at a historically anomalous rate from January 1 to December 31, 2024, compared with the same period in 2023.
- The decline in four of the eight major crime categories was statistically significant: homicide (20.9 percent), motor vehicle theft (18.6 percent), burglary (16.8 percent), and larceny/theft (9 percent).
- There were large (but non-significant) declines in sex offenses (9.9 percent) and robbery (8.1 percent).
- Simple assault was essentially unchanged, a decline of 1.9 percent.
- Aggravated assault increased (non-significantly) by 3.2 percent.
The rich, daily data from Live Crime Tracker’s city panel let us make reliable year-to-year comparisons.
Live Crime Tracker’s daily crime reports create a rich, city-level panel dataset for statistical significance testing. Although we report data nationally, there is substantial variation between cities in 2024 relative to 2023 and within cities over time.
- The declines in homicide, burglary, and motor vehicle theft are statistically significant at p<0.05.
- The decline in larceny/theft is statistically significant at p<0.10.
- The changes in sex offenses (p=0.198), simple assault (p=.771), and robbery (p=.358) are not statistically significant at conventional thresholds (p<0.10).
- The increase in aggravated assault (p=.749) is not statistically significant.
The decline in homicide highlights the importance of statistical significance testing and warrants further discussion. Because changes in crime are typically small overall, but individual city experiences may vary substantially, we use significance testing to conclude whether observed aggregate changes in crime between 2023 and 2024 occurred by chance.
Within a substantial decline at the national level, NORC’s experts found that the crime decline was highly variable across U.S. cities. Some cities within the Live Crime Tracker sample report homicide declines that are almost double the national average, while several cities report small increases. This variability highlights the uncertainty around national estimates and the need to report statistical significance testing. Without more data, what can be said is that homicide has declined at an unprecedented rate nationally. Still, the experience of any specific city and its residents may differ from the national average.
Table 1: Average Incident Rates per 100k Residents by Type of Offense, 2023 and 2024
2023 Rate per 100,000 | 2024 Rate per 100,000 | Difference per 100,000 | Percentage Change | P-value | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Larceny/Theft Offenses (n=48) | 2,291.85 | 2,086.66 | -205.187 | -9.0% | 0.033 |
Motor Vehicle Theft (n=48) | 929.66 | 756.97 | -172.69 | -18.6% | 0.001 |
Simple Assault (n=39) | 805.83 | 790.26 | -15.57 | -1.9% | 0.771 |
Burglary (n=49) | 576.99 | 480.09 | -96.90 | -16.8% | 0.071 |
Aggravated Assault (n=46) | 398.4 | 411.32 | 12.97 | 3.2% | 0.749 |
Robbery (n=49) | 173.04 | 159.1 | -13.94 | -8.1% | 0.358 |
Sex Offenses (n=36) | 70.85 | 63.81 | -7.04 | -9.9% | 0.198 |
Homicide Offenses (n=47) | 20.80 | 16.44 | -4.36 | -20.9% | 0.019 |
Source: Live Crime Tracker. https://livecrimetracker.norc.org/. Data from January 1-December 31, 2023, and January 1-December 31, 2024.
Data used in this study can be viewed at the Live Crime Tracker website maintained by NORC’s Center on Public Safety & Justice.
Discussion
Macro and micro forces may affect current crime trends.
Our comparison of all of 2024 with all of 2023 yields findings similar to those from our comparison of the first six months of 2024 with the first six months of 2023. Four of the eight categories of crime were found to be statistically significantly lower in 2024 than in 2023 in both studies. While robbery and simple assault are, on average, lower than 2023, in the analysis of the full year 2024, those differences are no longer significant.
We found substantial variation across the cities in the panel. That variation suggests that two causal mechanisms are affecting national crime statistics. First, national crime statistics consistently show that violence peaked in 2021-2022 and has since declined. This pattern suggests that macro forces affect crime and violence across the United States. These macro factors likely include a “return to business as usual” after the COVID-19 pandemic disruptions for local governments, which include police, courts, and schools. Other widely hypothesized macro factors include substantial federal government investments in general support for local governments and specific support for crime prevention and intervention measures, including unprecedented investments in community violence interventions.
Second, the results show substantial variation at the city level, suggesting the micro forces specific to those cities suppressing either macro trends or suppressing those factors. These micro forces likely fall into two categories. First, the macro forces described above have been unevenly implemented in cities. Second, crime and violence are hyper-local phenomena, and the momentum of prior pandemic-related violence may exceed the effect of more recent prevention and intervention policies and practices.
Overall, the decline in several major categories of crime observed in 2024 is unprecedented. We must make efforts now to understand the why and how of this change. With that understanding, our cities, states, and policies will best prepare for today and the future.
Methods
The authors used publicly available data from local governments and police agencies to examine crime by category from January 1, 2023, to December 31, 2024. The initial list of cities was created using the most recent year of U.S. Census data available. After compiling a list of cities with publicly available crime data in each of the eight categories described above, the cities were categorized by how frequently their data were updated, the type of data reported (i.e., raw incident data, aggregated monthly counts, or quarterly reports), and how and which crimes were reported (NIBRS offense codes or other categories). Project criteria required that cities report incident-level data and update the data frequently, with no regular severe lags.
The data are reported here in a minimally adjusted format. All data from the 49 U.S. cities available were normalized such that the eight crime categories included the same data across all cities. Within the 49 cities included in the analysis, missing data for short periods was imputed in two ways. For gaps of less than five days or less than 15 percent of one month, missing data were assumed to be missing completely at random and imputed as the value of the previous valid day. There were 278,702 valid observations, comprised of up to eight observations per day per city, depending on how many categories each city’s open data portal shares. Other notes:
- Data from all 54 cities included in the Live Crime Tracker as of January 10, 2025, were pulled on January 10. Three cities—New Orleans, LA, Baltimore, MD, and Madison, WI—were removed for this analysis because their 2024 data was not recent enough to warrant a year-long estimate of crime rates (i.e., their most recent data available was August 2024 or earlier). Two cities—Honolulu, HI, and Louisville, KY—were further removed from this analysis because their 2023 data were not available through the open data portal at the time of analysis. This resulted in 49 cities with data in any of the eight crime categories for our comparison.
- Each city’s data were filtered so that the dates of 2023 and 2024 data are directly comparable. If a city’s data are only available through December 5, 2024, 2023 data were filtered for that city to only go through December 5, 2023.
- Data were pulled on January 10 to minimize the prevalence of missing data due to reporting delays in the final days of 2024.
- Not all cities report all crime types, leading to differing numbers of cities used to calculate estimated rates. Most notably, fewer cities report sex offenses than other crime types, resulting in a smaller sample for those estimates.
- All observations over three standard deviations from that city's year mean were given an indicator that the data were potential outliers. That resulted in about 2,700 outliers in a dataset of more than 270,000. Staff reviewed these records to distinguish outliers from errors. We note that unusual data points are expected in very large datasets. However, since NORC is pulling records from the only source of daily data (official police records), there is no secondary data source for comparison other than annual totals and news reports. For each crime type within a city where outliers were indicated, staff determined whether the outliers only appeared in one of the years, which would bias the sample. Among these outliers, homicide in Kansas City was notable. Homicides on two dates (January 1, 2024, and February 14, 2024) together summed up more homicides than Kansas City police recorded officially for the full year. Thus, the total number of homicides officially reported by Kansas City Police Department (from the same data source our data was originally derived) was used in the final analysis. Specifically, the Kansas City homicide total was 144, not 497, as indicated by summing daily data.
An important caveat is that uncertainty is different from error.
The authors note that there is skepticism about the validity and reliability of national crime statistics. This is partly the result of the United States reporting national crime statistics from different sources, such as the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) and the national reported crime statistics from the FBI’s UCR program. Because these reports describe different time periods, at times when crime data are volatile—such as in 2022 and 2023, when violence stopped increasing and began to decline—the reports can conflict.
Additionally, the FBI does not traditionally report whether changes from one year to the next are statistically significant. Historically, almost all law enforcement agencies report data to the FBI and statistical testing is required. Beginning in January 2021, the FBI changed how law enforcement reports data, requiring detailed information about every crime rather than the summary data required before 2021. However, crime reporting to the FBI is voluntary, and the new, more intensive data collection led to a rapid decline in law enforcement reporting. As of May 2024, the FBI reports that about 82 percent of the United States population is covered by a National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) reporting agency. In several states, less than seventy percent of the population is covered by a NIBRS reporting agency (e.g., Alaska, Arizona, California, Florida, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania). As a result of the lower reporting rate, the FBI data currently is more of a sample than a census of law enforcement agencies. Reporting the statistical significance of observed changes can improve understanding that some level of uncertainty exists in aggregated estimates.
The Live Crime Tracker fills this gap. The Tracker compiles crime data directly from law enforcement agencies to bridge the gap between the most recent crimes reported and national data and does it in a timely way.
About NORC at the University of Chicago
NORC at the University of Chicago conducts research and analysis that decision-makers trust. As a nonpartisan research organization and a pioneer in measuring and understanding the world, we have studied almost every aspect of the human experience and every major news event for more than eight decades. Today, we partner with government, corporate, and nonprofit clients around the world to provide the objectivity and expertise necessary to inform the critical decisions facing society.
Contact: For more information, please contact Eric Young at NORC at young-eric@norc.org or (703) 217-6814 (cell).
About the Center on Public Safety & Justice
NORC’s Center on Public Safety & Justice develops actionable, evidence-based solutions to crime and victimization. The Center integrates our multidisciplinary team of experts in criminology, demography, economics, and public health and NORC’s industry-leading survey data collection capacity. Our holistic approach and longstanding partnerships with diverse local stakeholders in the hardest-hit communities allow us to identify programming innovations at every societal level.
About the Live Crime Tracker
Data for this study are developed from the panel reported through the online tracker—livecrimetracker.norc.org—which provides real-time data for 54 U.S. cities in eight crime categories, including homicide, burglary, and aggravated assault. The Live Crime Tracker includes in-depth city crime profiles, interactive maps, and a daily crime tracker that allows users to analyze trends over time and make comparisons across locations. It should be noted that the tracker compiles data shared by local governments, and some of the data they report are incomplete.
Suggested Citation
Roman, J. and Rice, K. (2025, January 16). Live Crime Tracker Shows Continued Major Crime Declines in 2024 [Web blog post]. NORC at the University of Chicago. Retrieved from https://www.norc.org.