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Crime Rate in Kansas City (2024)

Kansas City is covered at the neighborhood level: its police department publishes incident data by KCPD beat, so instead of a single city-wide score we rank all 81 KCPD beats by reported crime, from Kansas City's own open data.

Areas covered
81
KCPD beats
Data year: 2024
Source: KCMO Open Data — KCPD Crime Data 2024 (isbe-v4d8) · updated July 10, 2026

Volume, not a per-person rate. KCPD beat resident population is not reliably available for a per-100k rate, so no safety grade is published for any zone (see /crime-rate/methodology §6.6). The geographic unit is the KCPD beat (a policing/analysis boundary, not a resident-population neighborhood). relativeIndex ranks each zone by its VIOLENCE-WEIGHTED reported-incident volume (violent incidents weighted 3x property) against the other Kansas City zones — it is NOT population-adjusted and must not be read as a safety rate. Offenses are grouped into three coarse buckets (violent / property / other) via a keyword classifier.

Safest & most dangerous neighborhoods

Reported crime in Kansas City varies sharply by KCPD beat. Top 5 each — see the full rankings for all 81.

Protecting yourself in Kansas City

Worried about the numbers above? Compare local providers, estimate costs, and explore the right kind of coverage.

Security guides for Kansas City

Frequently asked questions

Why isn't there a single crime rate for Kansas City?
Kansas City's policing agency doesn't clear the FBI city-index bar we use for a city-wide 0–100 score, but it publishes incident data by KCPD beat. So instead of one blended rate, we cover Kansas City at the neighborhood level — ranking its KCPD beats by reported crime volume.
What is the safest neighborhood in Kansas City?
By 2024 reported crime volume, Beat 541 ranks safest among Kansas City's KCPD beats. See the full safest-neighborhoods ranking for the complete order.
What is the most dangerous neighborhood in Kansas City?
Beat 113 has the highest severity-weighted reported crime volume among Kansas City's KCPD beats for 2024. This reflects where incidents concentrate, not per-person risk.

No area has zero risk

A high Crime Index score means lower reported crime relative to other US cities — it is not a guarantee of safety. Reported crime is not the same as actual crime. Research on the gap between crime that occurs and crime that gets reported to police — often called the "dark figure" of crime — estimates that roughly 40% of violent crime and about a third of property crime go unreported each year. Every index built on official statistics, including this one, necessarily undercounts real crime. That gap is exactly why homicide — the offense with the smallest dark figure — anchors the calculation instead of a more commonly reported but less reliable category like theft.

Scores on this page reflect FBI-reported data for 2024. See the full methodology →

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