Rocky Point, NY Crime Map
Crime Level
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Rocky Point Neighborhoods & Data

Rocky Point, NY Crime Map

Explore crime rates, safest neighborhoods, and detailed crime statistics

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Safest Rocky Point Neighborhoods

Rocky Point Crime Rate Statistics

Full Statistics
A
Crime is 52% below national average
Safer than 97% of U.S. cities
Crime Index
Rocky Point
48
National Avg
100

100 = national average. Higher = more crime.

Violent Crime Risk

1 in 542

chance per year

52% lower than national avg

Property Crime Risk

1 in 84

chance per year

35% lower than national avg

100% of neighborhoods rated A or B for safety Based on 1 neighborhoods

Rocky Point, NY Safety Overview: What the Data Actually Shows

Rocky Point earns an overall crime grade of A — placing it among the safest communities on Long Island's North Shore. With a population of 13,138 spread across a low-density 448 residents per square mile, the community's character translates directly into its safety profile. Every single analyzed neighborhood in Rocky Point holds a Grade A rating, meaning 100% of the community falls into the "safe" tier. That's a rare distinction, and it's backed by real data — not just reputation.

Neighborhood-Level Crime Grades

Rocky Point's primary neighborhood — simply called Rocky Point — holds an A+ safety grade, the highest possible rating. With a local population of approximately 11,391 residents and a median household income of $126,139, this area reflects the kind of economic stability that correlates strongly with low crime. No neighborhoods in Rocky Point received a B, C, D, or F grade. The grade distribution is unambiguous: 100% Grade A.

For context, many comparable suburban communities on Long Island see 20–40% of their neighborhoods fall into lower safety tiers. Rocky Point's uniformity at the top of the scale sets it apart as a genuinely low-crime environment rather than a community with a few safe pockets surrounded by higher-risk areas.

Understanding Rocky Point's Crime Environment

Rocky Point's safety advantage is reinforced by several measurable community factors. The poverty rate sits at just 4.2% — well below national averages — and the median household income of $101,995 reflects broad economic stability across the community. The median home value of $327,220 further signals an invested, owner-occupied residential base, which research consistently links to lower property crime rates.

The unemployment rate of 7.2% is the one metric worth watching. While the community's overall crime grade remains excellent, elevated unemployment can be a leading indicator for property crime trends over time. Residents and prospective buyers should monitor this figure alongside the crime map as 2026 data continues to accumulate.

Property Crime vs. Violent Crime in Rocky Point

In communities with an A+ neighborhood grade like Rocky Point, the crime landscape is typically dominated by low-level property incidents — minor thefts, occasional vehicle break-ins, and isolated vandalism — rather than violent offenses. Violent crime incidents are statistically rare in Grade A communities, and Rocky Point's data is consistent with that pattern. The community's low population density (448 per sq mi) also reduces the environmental conditions that tend to elevate street-level crime in denser urban settings.

For residents, this means the practical safety concerns are oriented toward everyday property precautions — securing vehicles, using home alarm systems, and participating in neighborhood watch programs — rather than concerns about personal safety in public spaces.

How Rocky Point Compares to the Broader Region

Suffolk County encompasses a wide range of communities, from Grade A suburbs to areas with significantly more complex crime profiles. Rocky Point's A overall grade and A+ neighborhood rating place it in the top tier of Suffolk County communities by safety. Families relocating to the North Shore often compare Rocky Point with neighboring communities, and the crime data consistently supports Rocky Point as one of the more secure options in the region.

The combination of a strong safety grade, a median rent of $1,634, and a median home value of $327,220 positions Rocky Point as a community where safety and relative affordability intersect — a meaningful value proposition for families and first-time buyers.

Using the Rocky Point Crime Map Effectively

The interactive crime map for Rocky Point allows residents to move beyond summary grades and examine incident-level data by type, date, and location. Here's how to get the most out of it:

  • Filter by incident type to distinguish between property crimes and violent offenses — two very different risk profiles.
  • Use the time-range selector to identify whether any recent upticks are isolated events or part of a pattern.
  • Cross-reference with the neighborhood grade — Rocky Point's A+ rating means the baseline is low, so even a small cluster of incidents on the map may represent a temporary anomaly rather than a trend.
  • Check for seasonal patterns — coastal communities like Rocky Point sometimes see minor property crime increases during summer months when foot traffic rises near beach access points.

For official incident data, the Suffolk County Police Department publishes regular crime statistics and community safety updates covering Rocky Point and surrounding areas.

All 1 Neighborhoods in Rocky Point

Ranked by safety (safest first)
Rank Neighborhood Score Safety Median Income
#1 Rocky Point A+ Exceptionally safe $126,139

All 1 Neighborhoods by Crime Level

Ranked by crime (highest first)
Rank Neighborhood Score Safety Level Median Income
#1 Rocky Point A+ Exceptionally safe $126,139

Rocky Point Demographics Overview

11,391
Total Population
$126,139
Average Household Income
1
Neighborhoods Analyzed

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions: Rocky Point, NY Crime & Safety

Is Rocky Point, NY safe in 2026?

Yes — Rocky Point is one of the safer communities in Suffolk County. It holds an overall crime grade of A, and its primary neighborhood, Rocky Point, carries an A+ safety rating. Every analyzed neighborhood in the community falls into the Grade A tier, meaning 100% of Rocky Point is rated safe. Violent crime is rare, and property crime levels are well below national benchmarks. For families, retirees, and anyone prioritizing personal safety, Rocky Point's 2026 data presents a consistently positive picture.

What is the crime rate in Rocky Point compared to other NY communities?

Rocky Point's crime profile earns it an A letter grade — the top tier in our rating system. Rather than citing raw numeric scores, the most meaningful comparison is the grade distribution: Rocky Point has zero neighborhoods rated B, C, D, or F. In contrast, many Long Island communities of similar size have 15–30% of neighborhoods in lower safety tiers. Within Suffolk County, Rocky Point ranks among the safer suburban communities, particularly when factoring in its low poverty rate of 4.2% and median household income of $101,995, both of which correlate with sustained low crime over time.

What are the safest neighborhoods in Rocky Point?

The neighborhood of Rocky Point is the community's safest — and only analyzed — area, holding an A+ grade. With a local population of about 11,391 and a median household income of $126,139, it reflects a stable, economically secure residential base. There are no lower-graded pockets or high-crime enclaves within Rocky Point's boundaries based on current data. The entire community functions as a single, uniformly safe neighborhood, which is a meaningful advantage over communities where safety quality varies significantly block by block.

Is Rocky Point a good place to live for families?

Rocky Point checks most of the boxes families prioritize. The A+ neighborhood safety grade means children and residents can move through the community with a low baseline risk. The median household income of $101,995 and median home value of $327,220 reflect a stable, owner-occupied community with long-term investment in local quality of life. The poverty rate of just 4.2% is notably low, supporting strong school and community resources. The one area worth monitoring is the unemployment rate of 7.2% — slightly elevated compared to the community's other indicators — but this has not yet translated into any meaningful change in Rocky Point's Grade A crime profile as of 2026.

Does Rocky Point have any high-crime areas?

No. Based on current neighborhood-level analysis, Rocky Point has no areas rated below an A grade. The community's single analyzed neighborhood — Rocky Point itself — holds an A+ rating, the highest available. There are no Grade B, C, D, or F zones within the community's boundaries. This uniformity is relatively uncommon and reflects genuine community-wide safety rather than an average that masks high-crime pockets elsewhere in town.

How does Rocky Point's income level affect its crime rate?

Economic indicators and crime rates are closely linked, and Rocky Point's data illustrates this clearly. The community's median household income of $101,995 — and $126,139 in the Rocky Point neighborhood specifically — places it well above national medians. Higher income communities tend to have lower property crime rates due to greater investment in home security, stronger social cohesion, and lower economic desperation. Rocky Point's 4.2% poverty rate is particularly telling: communities with poverty rates under 5% consistently outperform higher-poverty peers on crime metrics, and Rocky Point's A+ neighborhood grade reflects exactly that relationship.