Jackson, TN

City Crime Score

Below avg crime

B+

Population

84,629

Median Income

$60,579

Home Value

$226,765

Median Age

38.0

Crime Statistics

Assault
110
Robbery
117
Burglary
110
Larceny/Theft
116
Vehicle Theft
118

Demographics

White: 50.0%
Black: 42.8%
Hispanic: 4.2%
Asian: 1.7%

25.8% have a bachelor's degree or higher

Housing

Owners: 56.3%
Renters: 43.7%
Crime Level
Low High
Jackson Neighborhoods & Data

Jackson, TN Crime Map

Explore crime rates, safest neighborhoods, and detailed crime statistics

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About Jackson

Jackson, TN

City Crime Score

Below average crime

B+

Population

84,629

Median Income

$60,579

Median Home Value

$226,765

Median Age

38.0

Crime Statistics

Assault
110
Robbery
117
Burglary
110
Larceny/Theft
116
Vehicle Theft
118

Demographics

White: 50.0%
Black: 42.8%
Hispanic: 4.2%
Asian: 1.7%

25.8% have a bachelor's degree or higher

Housing

Owners: 56.3%
Renters: 43.7%

Jackson, TN Safety Overview

Jackson, Tennessee — a city of 71,004 residents — carries an overall crime grade of D+, a rating that reflects genuine public safety pressures rather than isolated incidents. With a poverty rate of 24.1% and unemployment sitting at 8%, the socioeconomic conditions that correlate with elevated crime are measurably present here. That context matters when interpreting the crime map, because safety in Jackson is not uniform — it varies considerably from one neighborhood to the next, and understanding those distinctions is what separates informed decision-making from guesswork.

Neighborhood-Level Crime Patterns

Because the available city data does not include a published breakdown of individual neighborhood crime grades or their corresponding median incomes, it would be irresponsible to assign specific letter grades or income figures to named districts. What the data does confirm is that Jackson's D+ overall grade signals that a significant portion of its neighborhoods score at the C level or below, with only a limited share reaching the A or B range that residents in lower-crime metros might take for granted. Anyone evaluating a specific area — whether near North Highland, the Old Medina Road corridor, or the downtown core — should consult the interactive crime map directly to see current incident density before drawing conclusions.

Property Crime vs. Violent Crime

Jackson's crime profile leans heavily toward property offenses. Theft, burglary, and motor vehicle theft account for the majority of reported incidents across the city, consistent with patterns seen in similarly sized Tennessee cities where economic stress drives opportunistic crime. Violent crime — assaults, robberies — is a real concern but tends to concentrate in specific pockets rather than spreading evenly across all ZIP codes. The practical implication is that a neighborhood with a modest violent crime rate can still carry a poor overall grade if property crime volume is high, which is why looking at both categories separately on the map produces a more accurate picture than relying on a single composite score.

How the Crime Map Supports Smarter Decisions

For a city where the median home value is $138,064 and median rent is $878 per month, the stakes of choosing the wrong neighborhood are real and financially consequential. Home buyers comparing properties on opposite sides of Jackson can use the interactive crime map to layer incident data over listing locations, turning an abstract safety concern into a concrete, mappable variable. Renters evaluating apartments can filter by crime type and time range to distinguish between areas with chronic issues and those experiencing temporary upticks. Commuters traveling through Jackson during early morning or late evening hours can identify which corridors see the most reported incidents and adjust their routes accordingly. The map also serves employers, school parents, and business owners who need to assess safety conditions as part of routine planning — not just people who are new to the city.

What a D+ Grade Means in Practice

A D+ is not a failing grade, but it is a clear signal that Jackson faces above-average crime risk relative to national benchmarks. With a population density of just 442 residents per square mile, the city is not densely packed, which means crime concentration in specific nodes is more pronounced — certain streets and corridors absorb a disproportionate share of incidents while other parts of Jackson remain comparatively quiet. Residents who engage with the crime map regularly, report suspicious activity to the Jackson Police Department, and stay current with neighborhood-level trend data are better positioned to navigate those distinctions than those relying on city-wide averages alone. The overall grade is a starting point, not the whole story.