Focused on Major US metros and surrounding counties

Crime risk data.
For any US location.

Every score is computed from decades of public records using physics-based probability modeling, scored at neighborhood resolution. Finer than the county-level averages most public data provides, with the same data layer used by insurance and risk management professionals.

No signup required for the basic score. Instant results.

603 locations indexed 7 perils covered Data vintage 2024
Highest-risk location indexed

Houston County, TX

A live look at the data driving every PerilScore.

Crime risk score
9.3 / 10
High risk
Confidence 90%
Snapshot 2026-06-17
Computed from decades of public weather data using physics-based probability modeling.
Violent rate
1056
Property rate
4389
Offense rate
9626
Credibility
1.00

Methodology

Public data. Real science. No black boxes.

Every score is computed from decades of public weather records using physics-based probability modeling. It's the same approach used by insurance and risk management professionals.

Decades of public weather data

Hurricane tracks, storm intensities, fire perimeters, hail reports, all drawn from public scientific archives. We don't use proprietary data. You can audit every input.

Physics-based probability modeling

Scores reflect how the actual peril behaves: wind fields, fire spread, ground shaking, and storm tracks. The model keeps the physics visible instead of flattening every place into a broad average.

Used by professionals

The same PerilScore data layer is used by insurance and risk management professionals. We publish it here so anyone can find authoritative risk numbers for their location.

Real data from the PerilScore model

Representative local scores backed by public data.

Every score published on this site is computed from decades of public weather data using physics-based probability modeling. It’s the same approach used by insurance and risk management professionals.

We publish it here so that anyone searching for risk in a specific ZIP, city, or county can find authoritative, citable numbers.

Frequently asked questions

Where does the crime risk score come from?
Every score is computed from years of public incident records (FBI UCR and local law-enforcement reporting) aggregated to neighborhood-scale sample points (about 5 km² each), much finer than the county-level data most public sources publish. It’s the same data layer insurance and risk management professionals use for property risk assessment.
Is this score a forecast?
No. It’s a long-run probability score derived from years of historical incident reporting. It reflects the underlying risk environment, not a prediction for any single month or year.
Does this number apply to my exact address?
The score reflects the neighborhood-scale sample point at the location you searched. For a property-specific score that incorporates building, occupancy, and protection factors, use the free PerilScore app.
How is this different from a published crime map?
Public crime maps typically show recent incidents on a map. CrimeRate translates years of incident reporting into a single comparable 0-10 probability score per location, designed for risk modeling rather than situational awareness.

Want the full picture for a specific property?

The scores on this site show the representative crime layer for a local area. Enter a street address to add building age, construction type, roof details, occupancy, surroundings, and property-level context.

Free results for any US street address.