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FBI UCR Data · 248+ Cities · 50 States
CrimeContext

Long Beach, CA Crime Rate 2023: 322.8 per 100,000

Population 467K · 2023 FBI UCR Data · Safety Grade C

Long Beach, CA has a violent crime rate of 322.8 per 100,000 residents, which is 11% below the national average of 363.8. The property crime rate is 1,789 per 100,000, 2% below the national average. Over the past 5 years, crime in Long Beach has increased by 8.0%.Long Beach receives a Safety Context Score of C (58/100) based on 2023 FBI UCR data.

C
Safety Context Score
58/100
322.8/100K
Violent Crime Rate
vs 363.8 national
1,789/100K
Property Crime Rate
vs 1,832 national
+8.0%
5-Year Trend
Worsening
58/100
Safety Score
Grade C

Reading this data in context: Long Beach's violent crime rate of 322.8 per 100,000 residents is 11% below the national average. Over the past 5 years, the overall crime rate has increased (+8.0%). Crime data reflects reported incidents and does not capture the full picture of neighborhood safety. All crime statistics are compiled from the FBI Crime Data Explorer, which aggregates data reported by local law enforcement agencies nationwide.

Crime Rate Breakdown (per 100K residents)

All rates per 100,000 residents. National average shown for comparison.

Murder9.7 / 5.7 nat'l
70% above national
Robbery58.1 / 73 nat'l
20% below national
Aggravated Assault203.4 / 246.4 nat'l
17% below national
Burglary268.4 / 269.8 nat'l
1% below national
Larceny/Theft1,306 / 1,402 nat'l
7% below national
Motor Vehicle Theft196.8 / 318.3 nat'l
38% below national

Long Beach, CA Crime Types Explained

Below is the per-capita breakdown of each FBI-tracked offense in Long Beach, 2023. Every figure is per 100,000 residents — never a raw count — and includes the national average for comparison.

Robbery in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 58.1 robbery incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 20% below the national robbery rate of 73 per 100,000 — below the national average. The FBI defines robbery as taking property by force or threat of force. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for robbery.

Aggravated Assault in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 203.4 aggravated assault incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 17% below the national aggravated assault rate of 246.4 per 100,000 — below the national average. The FBI defines aggravated assault as unlawful attack with intent to inflict severe bodily injury, usually involving a weapon. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for aggravated assault.

Murder in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 9.7 murder incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 70% above the national murder rate of 5.7 per 100,000 — well above the national average. The FBI defines murder as intentional homicide, the most serious violent crime category. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for murder.

Burglary in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 268.4 burglary incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 1% below the national burglary rate of 269.8 per 100,000 — near the national average. The FBI defines burglary as unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony or theft. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for burglary.

Larceny-Theft in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 1,306 larceny-theft incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 7% below the national larceny-theft rate of 1,402 per 100,000 — near the national average. The FBI defines larceny-theft as the unlawful taking of property without force, threat, or fraud — the most common property crime. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for larceny-theft.

Motor Vehicle Theft in Long Beach, CA

Long Beach reported 196.8 motor vehicle theft incidents per 100,000 residents in 2023, which is 38% below the national motor vehicle theft rate of 318.3 per 100,000 — below the national average. The FBI defines motor vehicle theft as theft or attempted theft of a motor vehicle. See how Long Beach ranks nationally for motor vehicle theft.

5-Year Crime Rate Trend

Per-capita rates per 100,000 residents

Frequently Asked Questions

Long Beach has a Safety Context Score of C (58/100). The violent crime rate is 322.8 per 100,000 residents, compared to the national average of 363.8. Over the past 5 years, overall crime has increased (+8.0%).

Long Beach's violent crime rate is 322.8 per 100,000 residents and property crime rate is 1,789 per 100,000. These are per-capita rates based on FBI UCR data, which provide a more accurate comparison than raw crime counts.

Long Beach's 5-year crime trend shows a +8.0% change. Crime rates have been increasing, though trends can shift year to year. Always look at long-term trends rather than single-year changes.

Long Beach's violent crime rate of 322.8 per 100K is below the national average of 363.8. The property crime rate of 1,789 per 100K is below the national average of 1,832.

Based on 2023 FBI data, Long Beach earns a Safety Context Score of C (58/100). Long Beach's crime rates are near the national average. The 5-year trend is worsening, which is an important factor for anyone considering relocation. Crime statistics represent city-wide averages and vary significantly by neighborhood.

The most common crime type in Long Beach is larceny-theft at 1,306 per 100,000 residents. Overall, property crime (1,789/100K) is significantly more common than violent crime (322.8/100K), which is typical for most US cities. Motor vehicle theft is 196.8/100K below the national average of 318.3.

All crime rates are per 100,000 residents. Safety Context Scores are calculated using per-capita violent crime (40%), per-capita property crime (30%), and 5-year trend direction (30%), all compared to national averages.

this entity is one of the data points covered by this site’s U.S. city and county crime rates dataset. The detail above comes directly from the FBI UCR/NIBRS dataset; the context that follows situates the headline numbers against the broader distribution across U.S. cities and counties.

Every number on this page links back to the FBI UCR/NIBRS dataset; the methodology page describes the inputs, refresh cadence, and known limitations of the underlying data product.

For readers using this page as a decision input, the related-entity pages elsewhere on the site provide the comparison set. The most useful comparison for this entity is typically a peer within U.S. cities and counties with similar size, similar exposure, or similar geography — not the national-level summary alone.