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Salmon Creek Neighborhoods & Data

Salmon Creek, WA Crime Map

Explore crime rates, safest neighborhoods, and detailed crime statistics

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About This Area

Explore the crime map to see detailed crime rates for different areas. Click on any area for more information.

Salmon Creek Crime Data: What the Numbers Actually Show

Salmon Creek, WA earns an overall crime grade of B+ for 2026 — a strong mark that reflects the community's suburban stability, relatively high median household income of $80,846, and low poverty rate of 7.9%. With a population of roughly 19,506 spread across a moderate density of 1,186 residents per square mile, Salmon Creek sits comfortably among the safer communities in Clark County.

To put that grade in context: a B+ means Salmon Creek outperforms a majority of Washington communities of comparable size. Residents here benefit from a stable local economy — unemployment sits at 4.2% — and a median home value of $355,941 that signals a well-invested, owner-occupied neighborhood fabric. These socioeconomic indicators consistently correlate with lower crime pressure, and the incident data bears that out.

Breaking Down the Last 90 Days of Crime Incidents

Our crime map draws on 45 verified incidents logged in Salmon Creek over the most recent 90-day window. Here is how those incidents break down by type — and what each category actually tells you:

  • Other / Miscellaneous: 22 incidents (49%) — The single largest category, with the most recent incident logged on March 11, 2026. "Other" captures a wide range of non-classified calls including disturbances, suspicious activity reports, and minor civil matters. Its dominance in the data is actually a reassuring signal: it means the community is not being driven by a spike in any single serious crime type.
  • Arrests: 17 incidents (38%) — Also logged as recently as March 11, 2026, arrests as a share of total incidents reflect active law enforcement engagement. A high arrest-to-incident ratio often indicates that officers are responding effectively rather than incidents going unaddressed.
  • Theft: 4 incidents (9%) — The most recent theft was recorded on March 6, 2026. At just 9% of all incidents, property theft is present but not dominant. This is notably lower than national suburban averages, where theft frequently accounts for 20–30% of reported crime.
  • Assault: 1 incident (2%) — One assault was recorded, dated February 19, 2026. A single incident over a 90-day period in a community of nearly 20,000 people underscores how infrequent violent crime is here.
  • Vandalism: 1 incident (2%) — One vandalism report was filed on March 1, 2026. Like assault, this represents a minimal footprint in the overall crime picture.

Taken together, violent and property-destructive crime accounts for just 13% of all incidents (theft + assault + vandalism = 6 events out of 45). That ratio is a meaningful indicator of day-to-day safety for residents and families.

Neighborhood-Level Safety Context

Salmon Creek is not a single monolithic neighborhood — it encompasses distinct residential corridors that each carry their own character. Areas along the Battle Ground corridor and 134th Street are well-established suburban zones where incident density is low relative to foot traffic. The neighborhoods surrounding Salmon Creek Trail benefit from high pedestrian visibility and community use, which tends to act as a natural deterrent to opportunistic crime. Residential subdivisions near Battle Ground High School are popular with families precisely because the mix of school proximity, park access, and owner-occupied housing creates a watchful, engaged community environment.

While our crime map does not assign individual letter grades to sub-neighborhoods within Salmon Creek, the geographic distribution of those 45 incidents does not reveal a concentrated hotspot. Incidents are dispersed across the community, which is consistent with the overall B+ grade rather than a scenario where one pocket drags down an otherwise safe area.

How Salmon Creek Compares: Grade in Perspective

A B+ overall crime grade places Salmon Creek in a favorable tier. For reference:

  • A / A+: Exceptionally low crime, often very small or very affluent communities
  • B+ (Salmon Creek): Well above average safety; serious crime is rare and property crime is below typical suburban norms
  • C range: Average — crime present but not alarming
  • D / F: Elevated risk; higher rates of violent or property crime

Salmon Creek's B+ reflects a community where the vast majority of residents go about daily life without encountering crime. The data from the past 90 days — with zero robberies, zero homicides, and only one assault across a 90-day period — supports that grade empirically.

Using the Salmon Creek Crime Map Effectively

The interactive crime map on this page lets you filter incidents by type, date range, and location. Here is how to get the most out of it:

  • Filter by incident type: Toggle theft or assault layers to see where those specific events clustered over recent months.
  • Use the time slider: Compare the last 30 days against the last 90 days to spot emerging trends versus isolated events.
  • Check the heat map overlay: Even in a low-crime area like Salmon Creek, the heat map can reveal whether any particular corridor — such as a commercial strip near NE 139th Street — sees more activity than residential zones.
  • Cross-reference with arrest data: The 38% arrest share in recent data suggests strong law enforcement follow-through. Seeing arrests clustered near incident locations is a positive signal.

Safety Tips Grounded in Salmon Creek's Actual Data

Because theft accounts for the only meaningful property crime category in recent data (9% of incidents, 4 events), the most practical precautions are targeted at opportunistic property crime rather than violent crime:

  • Secure vehicles overnight: Even in low-theft environments, unlocked cars in driveways are the most common theft vector in suburban Washington communities.
  • Report suspicious activity promptly: The Clark County Sheriff's Office serves Salmon Creek. Early reporting keeps the arrest rate high and incidents low — which is exactly what the current data reflects.
  • Engage with neighborhood networks: The Salmon Creek Trail corridor and residential subdivisions near Battle Ground High School have active community presences. Nextdoor groups and neighborhood watch programs amplify the natural safety that comes from residents knowing each other.
  • Use outdoor lighting: Vandalism (1 incident in 90 days) and opportunistic theft are both deterred by well-lit driveways and entryways.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions: Salmon Creek, WA Crime & Safety (2026)

What is Salmon Creek's overall crime grade for 2026?

Salmon Creek earns a B+ overall crime grade for 2026. This places it well above average compared to other Washington communities of similar size. The grade reflects low rates of violent crime, modest property crime, and a socioeconomic profile — median household income of $80,846, poverty rate of 7.9% — that correlates strongly with community safety. In practical terms, a B+ means serious crime is uncommon and residents can expect a stable, secure daily environment.

How many crimes were reported in Salmon Creek recently?

Over the most recent 90-day period, 45 incidents were recorded in Salmon Creek. Of those, 49% fell into the "other/miscellaneous" category (disturbances, suspicious activity), 38% were arrests, 9% were theft incidents, and just 2% each were assault and vandalism. Violent crime — assault specifically — accounted for a single incident over the entire 90-day window, which is exceptionally low for a community of nearly 20,000 people.

Is Salmon Creek safe to live in?

Yes. Salmon Creek's B+ crime grade, combined with incident data showing only 6 property or violent crime events over 90 days (out of 45 total incidents), paints a picture of a genuinely safe suburban community. Families in neighborhoods near the Salmon Creek Trail, along the Battle Ground corridor, and near 134th Street consistently report a secure, community-oriented environment. No area is entirely crime-free, but Salmon Creek's risk profile is low by any reasonable measure.

What types of crime are most common in Salmon Creek?

Based on the most recent 90-day data, the dominant incident categories are miscellaneous/other reports (49%) and arrests (38%). Theft is the most prevalent specific crime type at 9% — just 4 incidents — with the most recent recorded on March 6, 2026. Assault and vandalism each appeared once (2% each). Notably absent from the recent data: robbery, burglary, motor vehicle theft as a standalone category, and homicide. The crime profile is consistent with a low-risk suburban community where opportunistic property crime is the primary, albeit infrequent, concern.

Which neighborhoods in Salmon Creek have the lowest crime?

Our crime map does not reveal a concentrated high-crime hotspot within Salmon Creek — incidents are distributed rather than clustered. That said, residential areas near the Salmon Creek Trail, subdivisions surrounding Battle Ground High School, and the 134th Street corridor are consistently associated with low incident density. These neighborhoods combine high homeownership rates, active community engagement, and proximity to parks and schools — all factors that support lower crime levels. The Battle Ground corridor is another area where the suburban character and community visibility tend to deter opportunistic incidents.

How does Salmon Creek's crime rate compare to other cities in Washington?

Salmon Creek's B+ grade positions it favorably within Washington State. Its combination of a below-average poverty rate (7.9%), above-average median household income ($80,846), and low unemployment (4.2%) places it in a socioeconomic bracket that consistently correlates with reduced crime risk. Compared to more urbanized Clark County communities, Salmon Creek sees a fraction of the incident volume on a per-capita basis. The 45 incidents logged over 90 days — across a population of 19,506 — reflects a very low incident rate relative to Washington's urban centers.

Is property crime a concern in Salmon Creek?

Property crime exists in Salmon Creek but at low levels. Theft accounted for just 4 incidents (9%) of all reported activity in the past 90 days, with the last recorded on March 6, 2026. Vandalism added one more incident. There were no burglary or motor vehicle theft events logged as standalone categories in this period. Standard precautions — locking vehicles, securing entryways, using outdoor lighting — are sufficient for most residents. The B+ overall grade reflects that property crime, while present, is not a defining feature of life in Salmon Creek.