The Safest Counties in America (2026)

Published March 3, 2026

Safety is consistently one of the top factors Americans consider when choosing where to live. Whether you are raising a family, retiring, or simply want peace of mind, crime rates matter. We analyzed FBI Uniform Crime Report data for all 3,144 US counties to find the 25 safest places in America.

The safest counties have total crime rates near zero — some reporting fewer than 30 incidents per 100,000 residents annually. For comparison, the national average total crime rate exceeds 2,000 per 100,000. The difference between the safest and most dangerous counties is staggering.

The 25 Safest Counties in America (2026)

These counties have the highest safety scores in our ranking system, filtered to include only counties with active crime reporting. Safety scores use percentile-rank methodology — a score of 94 means the county is safer than 94% of all US counties.

RankCountyStateSafety ScoreViolent Crime RateProperty Crime RateTotal Crime Rate
1Bronx CountyNY94.900.60.6
2Kings CountyNY94.900.70.7
3New York CountyNY94.900.10.1
4Wayne CountyIN94.801.51.5
5Iberia ParishLA94.802.92.9
6Stokes CountyNC94.804.54.5
7Gulf CountyFL94.706.76.7
8Cass CountyIL94.707.77.7
9Edgar CountyIL94.705.95.9
10Brown CountyIN94.706.46.4
11Crawford CountyIN94.609.59.5
12Mitchell CountyTX94.6011.211.2
13Wakulla CountyFL94.5011.911.9
14Carroll CountyIN94.5014.714.7
15Wadena CountyMN94.5014.214.2
16Holmes CountyMS94.5011.911.9
17Stark CountyIL94.4018.518.5
18Spencer CountyIN94.420.1020.1
19Union ParishLA94.44.814.319.1
20Washington CountyIL94.3021.821.8
21Williamson CountyIL94.3616.422.4
22Owsley CountyKY94.3024.724.7
23Nance CountyNE94.2029.729.7
24Sioux CountyND94.2025.725.7
25San Jacinto CountyTX94.221.77.228.9

Note

Crime rates shown are per 100,000 residents per year. The national average violent crime rate is approximately 380 per 100,000 and the national average property crime rate is approximately 1,950 per 100,000.

Geographic Patterns: Where Are the Safest Counties?

The safest counties cluster in specific regions. Indiana (5 counties), Illinois (5 counties), New York (3 counties), Louisiana (2 counties), Florida (2 counties) dominate the top 25. Several patterns stand out:

  • The Midwest and Plains states lead: Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, and surrounding states contribute the largest share of low-crime counties. Rural Midwestern communities consistently report some of the lowest crime rates in the nation.
  • Southern rural counties also rank well: Mississippi and Louisiana have parishes and counties with extremely low crime rates, often in communities with strong social cohesion and low population density.
  • Population density is the strongest predictor: Nearly every county on this list has a population under 50,000. Smaller communities have fewer total crime incidents, and per-capita rates reflect that.

The Violent Crime vs. Property Crime Divide

An important nuance in the data: some counties rank as extremely safe because they have virtually zero violent crime, even if property crime is slightly higher. Bronx County, New York leads with a safety score of 94.9 and a total crime rate of just 0.6 per 100,000.

Conversely, some counties with moderate property crime rates still rank well because violent crime — the category that most concerns families — is nearly nonexistent. For most people evaluating relocation, this is the metric that matters most.

How the Safest Counties Compare to the Most Dangerous

The gap between the safest and most dangerous counties is enormous. While the top 25 counties have total crime rates below 100 per 100,000, the most dangerous counties report rates exceeding 10,000 per 100,000 — a 100x difference.

Counties like Osage County, Oklahoma (safety score: 0) sit at the opposite end of the spectrum with total crime rates of 53073.7 per 100,000.

This disparity underscores why safety data should be a critical input in any relocation decision. The difference between the safest and most dangerous county in the same state can be as dramatic as the difference between two different countries.

What Drives Low Crime Rates?

Criminology research consistently identifies several factors that correlate with low county-level crime rates:

  • Population density: Rural counties with fewer residents per square mile have fewer opportunities for crime and stronger informal social controls.
  • Economic stability: Counties with low poverty rates and stable employment tend to have lower crime. Several top-25 counties have median household incomes above the national average.
  • Community cohesion: Smaller communities where residents know each other create natural deterrents to crime through social accountability.
  • Age demographics: Counties with older median ages — particularly retirement communities — consistently report lower crime rates than counties with younger populations.

Methodology

Safety scores are calculated using FBI Uniform Crime Report (UCR) data from 2022, the most recent complete reporting year. Violent crime includes murder, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault. Property crime includes burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft. Rates are per 100,000 residents. Counties are ranked using percentile methodology — a safety score of 94 means the county is safer than 94% of counties nationally. Counties with no FBI crime data available receive a default score and are excluded from this ranking to ensure accuracy.

Data sources: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates (2019-2023), FBI Uniform Crime Reports (2022), CDC County Health Rankings (2024), FEMA National Risk Index, NCES school data, and EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System. All figures are estimates and may differ from other published analyses due to methodology differences.