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FBI UCR Data · 248+ Cities · 50 States
CrimeContext

Updated April 2026 · FBI UCR 2023

Hawaii, Crime Statistics & Safety

Population 350,964 · Per-capita crime rates with FBI national context

See full Hawaii crime rankings →

Hawaii reports 534.8 violent crimes and 1,347 property crimes per 100,000 residents in the latest FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data. The state earns a Safety Context Score of 58/100 (Grade C), with a 5-year trend of 0.0% (stable).

534.8/100K
Violent Crime Rate
vs 363.8 national
1,347/100K
Property Crime Rate
vs 1,832 national
0.0%
5-Year Trend
Stable
58/100
Safety Score (C)

Hawaii in National Context

On violent crime, Hawaii reports 534.8 per 100,000 residents — modestly above the national rate (47% above the FBI national rate of 363.8/100K). On property crime, the state reports 1,347 per 100,000 — below the national rate (27% below the U.S. average of 1,832/100K). Property crime is far more common than violent crime nationally and at the state level. Hawaii's 5-year change of 0.0% is essentially flat, falling within the year-to-year noise band for state-level UCR data. The current snapshot is the most useful read; per-city pages show whether some cities are moving even when the state aggregate isn't.

State-level rates aggregate hundreds of cities and unincorporated areas with very different conditions. They are useful for cross-state comparison and for context-setting, but the per-city data below is the more decision-relevant figure for anyone evaluating an actual move or investment. The FBI Crime Data Explorer publishes the same underlying state aggregates and breaks them down by reporting agency, and the Bureau of Justice Statistics publishes the National Crime Victimization Survey for context on unreported crime.

How These State Figures Are Calculated

State-level rates are weighted aggregates of the city-level FBI UCR submissions in Hawaii, plus statistical adjustments for non-reporting agencies. The Safety Context Score uses the same composite as the city pages: per-capita violent crime versus the U.S. average (40%), per-capita property crime versus the U.S. average (30%), and 5-year trend direction (30%). All inputs are population-adjusted; raw counts are never used. The 2 cities highlighted above are the highest- and lowest-scoring cities in the state cohort. Read the full methodology.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the crime rate in Hawaii?

Hawaii's per-capita violent crime rate is 534.8 per 100,000 residents and the property crime rate is 1,347/100K. The U.S. national rates are 363.8/100K violent and 1,832/100K property — useful as comparison anchors when reading state-level figures.

Which cities in Hawaii are safest?

The 1 highest-scoring cities by Safety Context Score in Hawaii are listed below. Scores combine per-capita violent crime versus the U.S. average (40%), per-capita property crime versus the U.S. average (30%), and the 5-year direction of total crime (30%). Each city links to a full profile with year-by-year UCR data.

Is crime in Hawaii rising or falling?

Hawaii's 5-year trend on total per-capita crime is 0.0% — stable. State-level trends smooth over substantial city-to-city variation; the per-city pages below show which municipalities are driving the aggregate. Trend direction contributes 30% to the Safety Context Score because direction matters as much as the snapshot for long-run reads.

How does Hawaii compare to the U.S. average?

Hawaii's violent crime rate (534.8/100K) is above the U.S. average of 363.8/100K, and the property crime rate (1,347/100K) is below the U.S. average of 1,832/100K. State aggregates can mask very different conditions across cities, so per-city reads are the more decision-relevant figure for relocation or travel.

Where does the underlying data come from?

Every figure traces back to the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program, accessed through the FBI Crime Data Explorer at cde.ucr.cjis.gov. Population denominators come from the U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates Program. The Bureau of Justice Statistics (bjs.ojp.gov) publishes the National Crime Victimization Survey, which captures crime that goes unreported to police — useful supplementary context. The data is public domain.

Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime Reporting Program (2023), accessed via the FBI Crime Data Explorer. Population denominators from the U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates Program. Reporting context from the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Public domain.

Last refreshed 2026-04-06 · All rates per 100,000 residents.

For this entity, the underlying data on this page comes from the FBI UCR/NIBRS dataset. The breakdown above is the federal record; the paragraphs below add the per-entity context that makes the headline numbers usable for a real decision rather than just a data lookup.

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.