A new government document of departmental crime has been released that shows the incidence of crimes (‘délinquance’, delinquency) from burglaries to vehicle theft, to attempted homicides.
The document includes a departmental crime map which was compiled and published by the interior ministry statistics service le Service statistique ministériel de la sécurité intérieure (SSMSI). This is the second annual edition which was released on January 31.
Statistics are sourced from publicly-available data on the data.gouv.fr website, the SSMSI states, and also comes from reports from the police and gendarmerie nationale.
The map uses results for what the SSMSI calls ‘the 17 main indicators of delinquency’, including:
Non-armed burglary
Armed robbery
Attempted murder
Grievous bodily harm
Domestic violence
Arrests due to drugs
Vehicle thefts
The 324-page document also includes further maps showing various crime statistics, including changes year-on-year, the number of recorded victims of the given crime per 1,000 residents, and department comparisons.
The full document, including all maps and tables of data, can be downloaded free from the Interior Ministry website here (download link at the bottom of the text).
Armed robbery
For example, looking at armed robbery:
The figures for mainland France were 0.10 per 1,000 inhabitants for 2024, a drop of 2.26% year-on-year from 2023 to 2024.
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House burglaries and vehicle thefts
Another map shows the number of house burglaries per 1,000 homes in 2024, by department:
Number of house burglaries per 1,000 residentsInterieur.gouv.fr
Among the worst departments are (all with more than 7.5 infractions per 1,000 homes, above the national average of 5.9):
Gironde
Haute-Garonne
Indre-et-Loire
Bouches-du-Rhône
Vaucluse
Isère
Rhône
Ain
Cher
The departments with the fewest infractions (fewer than 2.4 per 1,000 homes), are:
Hautes-Alpes
Lozère
Cantal
Overall, the figures show that the number of house burglaries decreased from over 250,000 in 2016, to around 220,000 in 2024.
Stolen vehicles
A similar map shows the number of stolen vehicles per 1,000 residents in 2024, by department.
Number of vehicle thefts per 1,000 residentsInterieur.gouv.fr
Among the worst departments are (all with more than 2.5 stolen vehicles per 1,000 inhabitants, above the national average of 2.0):
Nord
Loire-Atlantique
Bouches-du-Rhône
Drôme
Isère
Rhône
The departments with the fewest infractions (fewer than 1.1 per 1,000 inhabitants), are:
Ariege
Hautes-Pyrenees
Gers
Tarn-et-Garonne
Tarn
Aveyron
Lozère
Cantal
Haute-Loire
Dordogne
Correze
Haute-Vienne
Creuse
Puy-de-Dome
Sartes
Orne
Manche
Côtes-d’Armor
Juta
Côte-d’Or
Haute-Saone
Haut-Rhin
Bas-Rhin
Vosges
Moselle
The document also shows the number of thefts from vehicles.
There are also maps showing figures for:
Destruction and vandalism
People arrested for the illegal use of drugs
The number of victims of scams and fraud
Police station locations
The document also has maps showing - for example - the nationwide locations of police stations, and gendarmerie brigades (see below).
A map showing the locations of police and gendarmerie stationsInterieur.gouv.fr
There is also a map showing how far a given area is from the nearest police or gendarmerie station, by car journey (from five minutes to more than 30 minutes).
A map showing the driving time from any police or gendarmerie stationInterieur.gouv.fr
The document also analyses figures for each region, with separate pages for each, and figures for each crime listed by region and department. These pages start from page 58 in the PDF, with each region listed alphabetically.
There are also sections for the French Overseas Departments.
Again, the full document can be downloaded free as a PDF from the Interior Ministry website here (download link at the bottom of the text).