Crime Level
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Conyers Neighborhoods & Data

Conyers, GA Crime Map

Explore crime rates, safest neighborhoods, and detailed crime statistics

Conyers Crime Rate Statistics

Full Statistics
D
Crime is 172% above national average
Higher crime than 98% of U.S. cities
Crime Index
Conyers
272
National Avg
100

100 = national average. Higher = more crime.

High Risk

Violent Crime Risk

1 in 112

chance per year

135% higher than national avg

High Risk

Property Crime Risk

1 in 18

chance per year

211% higher than national avg

100% of neighborhoods rated A or B for safety Based on 4 neighborhoods

Understanding Conyers' Safety Profile in 2026

Conyers, Georgia sits in an interesting position: the city carries an overall crime grade of D at the municipal level, yet every one of the four neighborhoods analyzed on this map earned an A or A- safety rating. That gap deserves explanation. City-wide crime grades factor in reported incidents across all commercial corridors, transit areas, and unincorporated zones — spaces that don't always map cleanly onto residential neighborhoods. When you zoom into where people actually live, the picture brightens considerably. All four analyzed neighborhoods fall into the Grade A tier, meaning 100% of measured residential areas in Conyers score in the safest category available.

Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Breakdown

The data reveals a clear pattern: Conyers' safest residential pockets tend to correlate with higher median household incomes. Here's how the four analyzed neighborhoods compare:

  • Honey Creek (Grade A) — The most populous analyzed neighborhood at 1,363 residents, Honey Creek also carries the highest median household income at $96,172. It consistently ranks as the top-performing neighborhood on the crime map.
  • Deer Run (Grade A) — With 567 residents and a median income of $95,592, Deer Run mirrors Honey Creek's strong safety profile. Despite being listed in the "higher crime areas" section, it still earns a full Grade A — a testament to just how safe the residential landscape is across the board.
  • The Plantation (Grade A-) — A smaller community of 138 residents with a median income of $79,758, The Plantation holds a solid A- rating, placing it firmly in the safe tier.
  • Lake Capri (Grade A-) — At 454 residents and a median income of $79,698, Lake Capri rounds out the analyzed neighborhoods with an A- grade, reflecting low residential crime activity.

It's worth noting that even the neighborhoods flagged as "higher crime" relative to others in Conyers — Deer Run and Honey Creek — still hold Grade A ratings. This underscores that the variation within Conyers' residential areas is narrow; the city doesn't have a "bad" neighborhood in the traditional sense when measured at the residential level.

The City-Wide Grade vs. Neighborhood Grades: Why the Gap?

Conyers' overall municipal crime grade of D reflects crime data aggregated across the entire city boundary — including commercial strips, highway corridors, and areas outside the four measured residential neighborhoods. With a population of 15,705, a poverty rate of 22.9%, and an unemployment rate of 9.1%, Conyers faces real economic pressures that can drive crime in non-residential zones. The median household income of $42,919 is notably lower than the $79,000–$96,000 range seen in the safest neighborhoods, illustrating how economic stratification shapes the safety map. Residents and prospective homebuyers should weigh both data points: the city-wide D grade signals real crime activity somewhere in Conyers, while the A-grade neighborhoods show that carefully chosen residential areas offer a very different day-to-day experience.

Economic Context and What It Means for Safety

A 22.9% poverty rate and 9.1% unemployment rate place Conyers above national averages on both measures, and research consistently links economic stress to elevated property crime. The median home value of $146,385 and median rent of $1,045 make Conyers relatively affordable by Georgia standards, which attracts a diverse population — but also means the city competes with wealthier suburbs for resources dedicated to public safety infrastructure. Neighborhoods like Honey Creek and Deer Run, where median incomes approach $96,000, benefit from the kind of community investment — home security systems, neighborhood watch participation, well-maintained properties — that correlates with lower crime rates. The A-grade outcomes in these neighborhoods aren't accidental; they reflect the compounding effect of economic stability on community safety.

How to Use the Conyers Crime Map Effectively

The crime map is most useful when you treat it as a layered tool rather than a single score. Here's how to get the most out of it:

  1. Filter by crime type. Property crimes like vehicle break-ins and theft tend to cluster near commercial areas and parking lots. Violent crimes follow different geographic patterns. Filtering by category gives you a sharper picture than looking at aggregate totals.
  2. Compare neighborhood grades side by side. All four analyzed neighborhoods sit at A or A-, but the gap between a full A (Honey Creek, Deer Run) and an A- (The Plantation, Lake Capri) can matter if you're making a housing decision.
  3. Look at density alongside grade. Conyers has a population density of 516 residents per square mile — moderate by Georgia standards. Lower-density pockets within the city often see fewer opportunistic crimes simply due to reduced foot traffic.
  4. Cross-reference with the Conyers Police Department. The official police reports page provides incident-level data that complements the map's visual overview.

Safety Tips Grounded in Conyers' Specific Data

Given that Conyers' residential neighborhoods score well but the city-wide grade reflects real risk in other zones, here are targeted recommendations:

  • Be more cautious in commercial corridors. The D-grade city-wide average suggests crime concentrates outside residential neighborhoods — near shopping centers, highway exits, and high-traffic commercial areas. Stay alert in these zones, especially after dark.
  • Leverage the strong community fabric in Grade A neighborhoods. Areas like Honey Creek and Deer Run have the income levels and community cohesion to support active neighborhood watch programs. Joining one reinforces what the data already shows.
  • Secure vehicles thoroughly. Property crime, particularly vehicle-related theft, is a common driver of elevated city-wide grades in mid-sized Georgia cities. Lock doors, avoid leaving valuables visible, and consider a dashcam or GPS tracker.
  • Stay updated on incident reports. Crime patterns shift seasonally. Checking the crime map quarterly — not just when you're moving — keeps your awareness current.

All 4 Neighborhoods in Conyers

Ranked by safety (safest first)
Rank Neighborhood Score Safety Median Income
#1 Honey Creek A Very safe $96,172
#2 Deer Run A Very safe $95,592
#3 The Plantation A- Very safe $79,758
#4 Lake Capri A- Very safe $79,698

All 4 Neighborhoods by Crime Level

Ranked by crime (highest first)
Rank Neighborhood Score Safety Level Median Income
#1 Lake Capri A- Very safe $79,698
#2 The Plantation A- Very safe $79,758
#3 Deer Run A Very safe $95,592
#4 Honey Creek A Very safe $96,172

Conyers Demographics Overview

2,522
Total Population
$87,805
Average Household Income
4
Neighborhoods Analyzed

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions: Conyers, GA Crime & Safety (2026)

Is Conyers, GA safe in 2026?

The answer depends on which part of Conyers you're asking about. At the city-wide level, Conyers carries an overall crime grade of D, reflecting incident data across all municipal zones including commercial and high-traffic areas. However, every one of the four residential neighborhoods analyzed on this map — Honey Creek, Deer Run, The Plantation, and Lake Capri — earned either a Grade A or Grade A- safety rating. That means 100% of analyzed residential neighborhoods fall into the safest tier. Residents who live in these neighborhoods experience a day-to-day safety environment that the city-wide D grade doesn't fully capture. As always, staying informed through the crime map and local police reports is the best way to maintain awareness.

What is the crime rate in Conyers compared to other Georgia cities?

Conyers' overall municipal grade of D places it below average relative to Georgia cities of similar size, which is consistent with its economic profile: a 22.9% poverty rate and 9.1% unemployment rate both exceed state and national averages. These factors correlate with elevated property and opportunistic crime in commercial zones. That said, the residential neighborhood data tells a more nuanced story — all four analyzed neighborhoods score Grade A or A-, suggesting that crime is not evenly distributed across the city. Families who settle in neighborhoods like Honey Creek (Grade A, median income $96,172) or Deer Run (Grade A, median income $95,592) are living in areas that perform comparably to the safest communities in the state.

What are the safest neighborhoods in Conyers?

Based on 2026 crime map data, the safest neighborhoods in Conyers are Honey Creek and Deer Run, both rated Grade A. Honey Creek is the largest of the four analyzed communities with 1,363 residents and the highest median household income at $96,172. Deer Run, with 567 residents and a median income of $95,592, matches Honey Creek's full A grade. The Plantation (138 residents, $79,758 median income) and Lake Capri (454 residents, $79,698 median income) both hold Grade A- ratings, placing them just a step below but still firmly in the "very safe" category. All four neighborhoods are worth considering for families and individuals prioritizing residential safety.

Why does Conyers have a D overall crime grade if the neighborhoods are all Grade A?

This is one of the most important questions to ask when reading any city crime map. The overall municipal grade of D is calculated using crime data from the entire city boundary — including commercial districts, highway corridors, transit areas, and zones that aren't captured in the four analyzed residential neighborhoods. Cities with significant economic stress (Conyers has a 22.9% poverty rate and median household income of $42,919) often see crime concentrate in specific non-residential zones, which pulls the city-wide grade down even when residential pockets are very safe. The D grade is a real signal that crime exists in Conyers — it shouldn't be dismissed — but it doesn't mean every block carries equal risk. The neighborhood-level A grades in Honey Creek, Deer Run, The Plantation, and Lake Capri reflect genuine residential safety.

Is Conyers a good place to buy a home in 2026?

From a safety and affordability standpoint, Conyers offers a compelling combination in its Grade A neighborhoods. The median home value of $146,385 is well below Georgia's state median, and neighborhoods like Honey Creek and Deer Run — both Grade A — carry median household incomes near $96,000, suggesting stable, owner-occupied communities. The city-wide D crime grade warrants attention and should factor into your decision about which specific area to buy in. Prospective buyers should use the crime map to compare neighborhood grades directly, prioritize the A-rated areas, and cross-reference with the Conyers Police Department's public reports for the most current incident data near any property they're considering.

How does Conyers' poverty rate affect neighborhood safety?

Conyers' poverty rate of 22.9% — combined with a 9.1% unemployment rate — creates economic conditions that research consistently links to elevated property crime at the city-wide level. However, the neighborhood data shows that this effect is not uniform. Honey Creek and Deer Run, with median incomes of $96,172 and $95,592 respectively, sit far above the city median of $42,919 and earn Grade A safety ratings. The Plantation and Lake Capri, with incomes around $79,700, also score Grade A-. The income gap between these neighborhoods and the city median is substantial, and it helps explain why residential crime grades diverge so sharply from the overall municipal D grade. Economic stratification within Conyers essentially creates two different safety experiences depending on where you live.