North Carolina
Crime data through May 2026 · trailing 12 months
All eight FBI Part I offenses
| Offense | Count | Per 100k | YoY | 5-year trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homicide | 534 | 4.9 | -29.6% | |
| Rape | 2,236 | 20.6 | -24.2% | |
| Robbery | 3,435 | 31.7 | -34.3% | |
| Aggravated assault | 21,889 | 202.0 | -27.5% | |
| Burglary | 24,855 | 229.4 | -27.0% | |
| Larceny | 110,433 | 1019.2 | -24.2% | |
| Motor vehicle theft | 16,695 | 154.1 | -34.8% | |
| Arson | 952 | 8.8 | -31.9% |
Crime trends since 2023
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 North Carolina are still reporting.
What this data says
North Carolina reported 534 homicides in the trailing 12 months — a rate of 4.9 per 100,000 residents. That's a 29.6% decrease compared to the prior 12-month window.
North Carolina's rate sits above the national median. It ranks #10 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: rape is down 24.2%, robbery is down 34.3%, aggravated assault is down 27.5%.