Crime against households and adults, also including data on crime experienced by children, and crimes against businesses and society.
Publications
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Crime in England and Wales: year ending March 2018
Crime against households and adults, also including data on crime experienced by children, and crimes against businesses and society.
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Re-design of Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) Core questions for Online Collection
ONS commissioned Kantar Public to investigate the feasibility of collecting CSEW data via an online questionnaire, with a focus on the re-design of the key sections of the survey that are required to count and classify the incidents of crime experienced by respondents.
Data
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Crime in England and Wales: Annual Trend and Demographic Tables
Data from the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) showing breakdowns of victimisation over time and by various demographic characteristics. Please note: The methodology by which the CSEW calculates its incidents of crime changed in December 2018. Incident numbers and rates published in the Annual Trend and Demographic Tables prior to the year ending September 2018 dataset are not comparable with those currently published. Data from the Telephone-operated Crime Survey for England and Wales (TCSEW) showing victimisation for the year ending March 2022 by various demographic characteristics are also presented in this workbook.
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Crime in England and Wales: Quarterly data tables
Data from Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) and Home Office police recorded crime broken down into quarterly time periods. Because of the suspension of the face-to-face Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) on 17 March 2020 owing to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, from the year ending June 2020 to the year ending June 2022 these tables only contain Home Office police recorded crime data.
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Recorded crime data at Police Force Area level
Recorded crime for Police Force Areas. The data are rolling 12-month totals, with points at the end of each financial year between year ending March 2003 to March 2007 and at the end of each quarter from June 2007.
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Household Crime Prevalence (CSEW open data table)
Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) estimates, broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and important household characteristics.
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Perceptions Other (CSEW open data table)
Estimates from the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW), broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and important demographic or household characteristics.
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Crime in England and Wales: Annual supplementary tables
Data from the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) on perceptions of the police, criminal justice system, crime and anti-social behaviour. Also contains data on prevalence of intimate personal violence.
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Recorded crime data at Police Force Area level (including pivot table)
Recorded crime for Police Force Areas, including a pivot table. The data are rolling 12 month totals, with data points shown at the end of each financial year between year ending March 2003 and year ending March 2007 and at the end of each quarter from June 2007.
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Crime in England and Wales: Additional tables on fraud and cybercrime
Estimates from Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) on fraud and computer misuse. Also data from Home Office police recorded crime on the number of online offences recorded by the police and Action Fraud figures broken down by police force area. These tables were formerly known as Experimental tables. Please note: This set of tables are no longer produced. All content previously released within these tables has, or will be, redistributed among other sets of tables.
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Crime in England and Wales: Appendix tables
Trends in Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) crime experienced by adults and children aged 10 to 15 years and Home Office police recorded crime, by offence type. Also includes trends in offender relationship of CSEW violence. Because of the suspension of the face-to-face CSEW on 17 March 2020, owing to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, data tables from the year ending June 2020 to the year ending March 2022 shown in this workbook also include data from the Telephone-operated Crime Survey for England and Wales (TCSEW). Crime survey data on crimes experienced by children aged 10 to 15 years currently remain unavailable from the year ending June 2020 onwards.
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Crime in England and Wales: Other related tables
Firearms, knife and sharp instrument offences, offences involving a corrosive substance, hospital admissions for assault with sharp objects, fraud, offences flagged as domestic abuse-related, corruption, child sexual abuse and child exploitation. Data tables also include information on anti-social behaviour, perceptions, and non-notifiable incidents.
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Personal Crime Prevalence (CSEW open data table)
Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) estimates, broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and important demographic characteristics.
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Crime Severity Score (Experimental Statistics)
Crime Severity Score (CSS) data for police force areas and community safety partnerships, which equate in the majority of instances to local authorities. Includes a data tool to enable production of summary charts on trends and comparisons between areas.
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Crime in England and Wales: Police Force Area data tables
The number of police recorded crimes, percentage change from previous year and rate per 1,000 population by offence group, firearms, knife and sharp instrument, fraud and anti-social behaviour offences by Police Force Area.
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Personal Crime Incidence (CSEW open data table)
Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) estimates, broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and important demographic characteristics.
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Household Crime Incidence (CSEW open data table)
Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) estimates, broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and key household characteristics.
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Recorded crime data at Community Safety Partnership and local authority level
Recorded crime figures for Community Safety Partnerships which equates in the majority of instances to local authorities . The data are rolling 12 month totals, with data points shown at the end of each financial year between year ending March 2003 and year ending March 2007 and at the end of each quarter from June 2007. The data cover local authority boundaries from April 2009 onwards and local authority area names correspond to Community Safety Partnership areas.
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Recorded crime data by Community Safety Partnership area
Recorded crime figures for Community Safety Partnership areas, which equate in the majority of instances to local authorities. Contains the number of offences for the last two years, percentage change between these two time periods and rates per 1,000 population for the latest year.
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Perceptions Criminal Justice System (CSEW open data table)
Estimates from the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW), broken down by each combination of offence group, age, sex, and important demographic or household characteristics.
Methodology
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Crime and justice methodology
Links to guidance, methodology and information documents for crime statistics in England and Wales.
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User guide to crime statistics for England and Wales: March 2020
Quarterly statistics on crime levels and trends in England and Wales. This user guide contains detailed information on the datasets used to compile crime statistics published by Office for National Statistics (ONS).
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Improving crime statistics for England and Wales – progress update July 2020
Latest update on the progress being made to improve crime statistics for England and Wales.
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Crime in England and Wales QMI
Quality and Methodology Information for crime levels and trends in England and Wales, detailing the strengths and limitations of the data, methods used, and data uses and users.
The United Kingdom Statistics Authority has designated these statistics as National Statistics, in accordance with the Statistics and Registration Service Act 2007 and signifying compliance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics.
Designation can be broadly interpreted to mean that the statistics:
- meet identified user needs
- are well explained and readily accessible
- are produced according to sound methods
- are managed impartially and objectively in the public interest
Once statistics have been designated as National Statistics it is a statutory requirement that the Code of Practice shall continue to be observed.