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State of AR · Pop. 3,067,732

Arkansas

All eight FBI Part I offenses

Offense Count Per 100k YoY 5-year trend
Homicide 168 5.5 -25.7%
Rape 1,966 64.1 -9.4%
Robbery 877 28.6 -23.3%
Aggravated assault 11,960 389.9 -12.8%
Burglary 7,943 258.9 -23.4%
Larceny 33,456 1090.6 -19.7%
Motor vehicle theft 3,818 124.5 -25.0%
Arson 314 10.2 -6.8%

Crime trends since 2023

Each offense is rescaled so it equals 100 in January 2023. A line above 100 means more offenses reported now than then; below 100 means fewer. Trailing 12-month totals are used to smooth out seasonality. Hover the chart to inspect any month.

Indexed to January 2023 to exclude the 2020–2022 period when many U.S. law enforcement agencies were still transitioning to the FBI's NIBRS reporting standard. Including those years would conflate more agencies reporting with more crime occurring.

5060708090100110120130140150Jan 23Oct 23Aug 24Jun 25Apr 26Rape80Aggravated assault75Robbery72Larceny63Arson61Burglary57Homicide51Motor vehicle theft50

How to read this chart

A declining line can mean several things: fewer crimes occurred (effective policing, courts, or deterrence at work), fewer crimes were reported (agencies dropped out of NIBRS), or crimes were reclassified into different categories. A rising line carries the same ambiguity in reverse. FBI data captures only what agencies submit — see The Gap to verify which agencies in Arkansas are still reporting.

What this data says

Arkansas reported 168 homicides in the trailing 12 months — a rate of 5.5 per 100,000 residents. That's a 25.7% decrease compared to the prior 12-month window.

Arkansas's rate sits above the national median. It ranks #6 of 51 states by homicides per capita (1 = highest). The national median across all states is 3.2 per 100,000.

Other notable year-over-year shifts: robbery is down 23.3%, burglary is down 23.4%, larceny is down 19.7%.

All figures are pulled directly from the FBI's Crime Data Explorer, which aggregates monthly submissions from local law enforcement agencies. Numbers reflect offenses reported to police — not all crime, and not crime that was solved. Rate calculations use 2024 U.S. Census Bureau population estimates.