Colorado's crime rate
There were 171,127 crimes reported in Colorado in 2019, the most recent year crime data is available. Adjusted for population, Colorado's crime rate is 2,972 crimes per 100,000 residents.
How does Colorado compare?
Crime is more common in Colorado than it is on average nationwide. By comparison, the national crime rate of 2,489 per 100,000 people is 16% lower. Of the 50 states, 12 have a higher crime rate than Colorado.
Crime rates nationwide range from 1,361 per 100,000 in Maine to 3,945 per 100,000 in New Mexico, the states with the lowest and highest crime rates, respectively.
Here are the crime rates for all 50 states.
What types of crimes are being committed?
The FBI's crime rate includes seven crime categories: three property crimes -- larceny, burglary, and motor vehicle theft, and four violent crimes -- aggravated assault, robbery, rape, and murder.
Property crime
The vast majority of crimes in America are property crimes, accounting for 85% of total crimes in 2019. This share was slightly higher in Colorado, with property crimes accounting for 87% of all crimes reported in the state.
There were 149,189 property crimes reported in Colorado in 2019, or 2,591 per 100,000 residents. This is higher than the national rate of 2,110 property crimes per 100,000 people and is the 13th highest rate of the 50 states.
Larceny
Larceny is by far the most common type of property crime. The 5,086,096 reported incidents nationwide in 2019 accounted for 73% of all property crime. Colorado's rate of 1,858 reported larceny incidents per 100,000 residents is higher than the nationwide rate of 1,550 per 100,000 and is the 12th highest among states.
Burglary
An estimated 20,064 break-ins were reported in Colorado in 2019, or 348 per 100,000 state residents -- the 22nd highest rate among states. For reference, there were an estimated 1,117,696 break-ins nationwide, or 341 break-ins per 100,000 people.
Motor vehicle theft
Across the U.S., there were 721,885 reported motor vehicle thefts in 2019, a rate of 220 per 100,000 people. Colorado's rate of 384 motor vehicle thefts per 100,000 residents was much higher than this national rate and the second highest rate compared to all states.
Violent crime
Violent crimes make up a small share of crimes nationwide. In Colorado, violent crimes account for just 13% of total crimes, versus 15% nationwide.
While Colorado has the 38th lowest total crime rate of all states, it has the 30th lowest violent crime rate. The state’s violent crime rate of 381 per 100,000 people is on par with the national rate of 379 per 100,000. There were 21,938 violent crimes reported to Colorado law enforcement agencies in 2019.
Aggravated assault
Aggravated assault is by far the most common type of violent crime. Nationwide, there were 821,182 aggravated assaults in 2019, accounting for 66% of violent crimes across the country. In Colorado, 14,185 aggravated assaults were reported in 2019. Colorado's rate of aggravated assault of 246 per 100,000 people is roughly the same as the national rate of 250 per 100,000 and is the 25th highest of all states.
Robbery
Robbery is the second most common type of violent crime in America. There were 3,663 robberies reported in Colorado in 2019, or 64 robberies for every 100,000 residents. This is lower than the national rate of 82 robberies per 100,000 people, and the 25th highest robbery rate among states.
Rape
There were 3,872 reported rapes in 2019 in Colorado. The state's rate of rape of 67.2 per 100,000 residents is much higher than the national rate of 42.6 per 100,000 people. Colorado has the sixth highest rate of rape.
Murder
In 2019, there were 218 murders reported to law enforcement in Colorado. The state’s murder rate of 3.8 per 100,000 residents is lower than the national rate of 5.0 per 100,000. Colorado's murder rate is the 23rd lowest in the country.
Where are these crimes being committed?
Because crime is influenced by local circumstances, crime levels vary considerably within each state. Often a state’s dense urban areas will have higher crime rates than its rural areas. Even in a state with an exceptionally low crime rate, there is often at least one area where crime rates exceed the nation.
City with the highest crime rate in Colorado
The city with the highest total crime rate in Colorado is Glendale, with a crime rate of 18,642 per 100,000 residents. This excludes cities with a population below 5,000 and cities with incomplete FBI crime reports.
Because property crimes are much more common than violent crimes, often the city with the highest total crime rate in a state has an especially high property crime rate but not the highest violent crime rate. However, this is not the case in Colorado. Not only does Glendale have the highest total crime rate in the state, but it also has the highest property crime rate at 17,697 per 100,000 and highest violent crime rate at 945 per 100,000. The city's violent crime rate is nearly two and a half times the statewide rate.
Crime over time
National historical trend
The FBI provides access to crime data by state dating back to 1960. This 60-year span, can be divided into three periods. Crime skyrocketed between 1960 and 1980, with the crime rate more than tripling in just 20 years from 1,887 crimes per 100,000 Americans to 5,950 crimes per 100,000 Americans.
Crime remained high in the 1980s and reached its second highest peak in 1991. Since that year, crime has fallen steadily nationwide, reaching its current rate of 2,489 per 100,000, a 58% decline in 28 years.
Colorado's historical trend
In 1960, Colorado's crime rate was 2,172 crimes per 100,000 residents. Crime peaked in the state in 1981 at 7,353 per 100,000, an increase of 238%.
Crime changes 2014-2019
Over the five years since 2014, the nationwide total crime rate has decreased by 15.2%, but this change varied dramatically between states. In New Hampshire, for example, the crime rate decreased by 37.0%, the largest decline of any state. The largest increase was in Alaska, where crime rose by 11.3% between 2014 and 2019.
How Colorado has compared to other states historically
Since 1960, Colorado has typically had a higher crime rate than the majority of states. Over these 60 years, the state has been among the 10 states with the highest crime rates in 22 of them, but never among the states with the lowest crime rates.
All cities in Colorado
Here are all Colorado cities ranked by total crime rate. For a city to be included, it must have a complete 2019 FBI crime report and population of 5,000 or more. Click any bar or city name to see more about crime in that city.
Click here to see a list of all city crime pages.
Click here to see a list of all state crime pages.
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