Official data.police.uk street-level crime

Crime in B17: Harborne, Birmingham

Crimes (Apr 2026)
325
Monthly avg
298
Top category
Violence and sexual offences

data.police.uk recorded 325 street-level crimes at the representative point for B17 (Harborne, Birmingham) in Apr 2026. The most common category was violence and sexual offences (142 reports, 43.7% of the total). The monthly total rose versus the month before. That is about 9% busier than the recent 6-month average for this area.

Harborne, a residential south-west Birmingham district.

Crime by category in B17

Every street-level crime recorded near the B17 representative point in Apr 2026, by Home Office category, most common first:

CategoryCrimesShare
Violence and sexual offences142
43.7%
Other theft34
10.5%
Vehicle crime34
10.5%
Shoplifting24
7.4%
Public order21
6.5%
Criminal damage and arson20
6.2%
Burglary14
4.3%
Anti-social behaviour10
3.1%
Robbery7
2.2%
Theft from the person7
2.2%
Drugs5
1.5%
Bicycle theft3
0.9%
Possession of weapons3
0.9%
Other crime1
0.3%

325 crimes recorded in Apr 2026. data.police.uk snaps each crime to one of a fixed set of anonymised map points, so counts describe the area around the B17 centroid, not a single street or property.

B17 crime trend: last 6 months

The monthly recorded-crime total at the B17 representative point. The recent monthly average is 298 crimes. A single outcode is a small sample, so read the direction rather than any single month.

326
Nov 2025
301
Dec 2025
286
Jan 2026
256
Feb 2026
296
Mar 2026
325
Apr 2026

Source: data.police.uk crimes-street API. The dataset publishes monthly with a ~1–2 month lag; the latest month shown is the newest the API had on the last refresh.

Area context

How safe is B17?

In Apr 2026, B17 was about 9% busier than the recent 6-month average for this area. Recorded crime is not the same as risk: city-centre and high-footfall outcodes record more crime simply because more people pass through them, and recorded figures reflect reporting and policing as well as offending. Use this as area context alongside the price, flood and ground-stability picture — not in isolation.

325 recorded crimes · Apr 2026 · violence and sexual offences most common

See the crime mapped to one B17 address

This page is the area picture. To see the crimes mapped closest to one exact property — alongside its sold-price history, EPC, flood and ground risk, and a current valuation — search the address. The full breakdown is in the £24.99 Complete report.

Frequently asked questions

How much crime is there in B17?

data.police.uk recorded 325 street-level crimes in B17 (Harborne, Birmingham) in Apr 2026, against a recent monthly average of 298 over the last 6 months. The largest single category was violence and sexual offences, at 43.7% of reports. These are reports snapped to anonymised map points near the outcode centroid, not a per-property figure.

What are the most common crimes in B17?

In Apr 2026 the most common recorded categories in B17 were violence and sexual offences (142), other theft (34), vehicle crime (34). The full category breakdown is in the table above, taken straight from the Home Office crime categories on data.police.uk.

Is B17 getting safer or more dangerous?

Over the last 6 months of data.police.uk data, the monthly recorded-crime total for B17 rose most recently and averaged 298 crimes a month. A single outcode is a small sample and recorded crime reflects reporting and policing as well as underlying offending, so read the trend, not one month in isolation.

How accurate is the crime data for B17?

It is official Home Office data published on data.police.uk under the Open Government Licence. Each crime is snapped to one of a fixed set of anonymised map points near where it happened — never the exact address — so figures describe the area around the outcode centroid, not a single property. Search an exact address on HouseCheckup to see the crimes mapped closest to it in the full report.

Crime in nearby areas

← UK crime map: crime by postcode

Sources

Contains public sector information from data.police.uk licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Street-level crimes are snapped to anonymised map points, not exact addresses.