Crime Level
Low High
View Park-windsor Hills Neighborhoods & Data

View Park-windsor Hills, CA Crime Map

Explore crime rates, safest neighborhoods, and detailed crime statistics

Low High

About This Area

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

Understanding View Park-Windsor Hills' Overall Crime Grade

View Park-Windsor Hills carries an overall crime grade of D+ for 2026 — a rating that warrants honest attention from residents, prospective buyers, and renters alike. Set against a median household income of $95,977 and a median home value of $795,953, the community sits in a notable tension: it is one of the more affluent unincorporated communities in Los Angeles County, yet its crime profile lags behind what its socioeconomic standing might suggest. Understanding why — and what it means for daily life — requires looking closely at the data.

Property Crime: The Dominant Safety Concern

Across View Park-Windsor Hills, property crime is the category that most heavily drags down the community's D+ grade. Burglary, vehicle theft, and theft from vehicles account for the large majority of reported incidents. This pattern is consistent with broader trends in the unincorporated Los Angeles County corridor: higher-value homes and vehicles create attractive targets, particularly along boundary streets where the neighborhood transitions into adjacent communities.

Residents in the Windsor Hills pocket — closer to major arterials — tend to report higher concentrations of vehicle-related theft, while the more secluded streets of View Park proper see a greater share of residential burglary attempts. Neither sub-area is immune, and the crime map reflects a spread of incidents rather than a single concentrated hotspot.

Violent Crime: Less Frequent, Still Present

Violent crime in View Park-Windsor Hills is less prevalent than property crime but is not negligible. Assaults and robberies represent a smaller share of total incidents, and they tend to cluster near commercial corridors and transit-adjacent streets rather than deep within residential blocks. The community's relatively low poverty rate of 9.6% and high median income help buffer against some drivers of violent crime, but an unemployment rate of 11.5% — notably elevated for a community at this income level — introduces economic stress that can correlate with opportunistic offenses.

How the Numbers Compare to the Broader Area

With a population of 11,621 spread across a density of 2,436 people per square mile, View Park-Windsor Hills is a moderately dense, walkable community. That density means incidents are geographically closer together than in sprawling suburbs, which can make the crime map appear more concentrated than a raw per-capita rate would suggest. For context, the D+ grade places the community in the lower tier of California communities — not at the bottom, but well below the B-range grades seen in comparable affluent Los Angeles County enclaves.

Neighborhood-Level Patterns on the Crime Map

Drilling into the crime map reveals meaningful differences between the two namesake neighborhoods:

  • View Park: The historic hillside streets — characterized by mid-century architectural landmarks and tree-lined cul-de-sacs — show lower incident density. The natural topography and limited through-traffic create a degree of passive security. Property crime still occurs here, but at a lower rate than the community average.
  • Windsor Hills: The flatter, more grid-like Windsor Hills section sees higher incident frequency, particularly auto-related theft. Its proximity to Crenshaw Boulevard and other commercial strips increases foot traffic and, with it, exposure to opportunistic crime.

The crime map's heat-map layer makes this gradient visible: cooler tones dominate the View Park hilltop while warmer concentrations appear along Windsor Hills' commercial edges.

Accessing the Crime Map and Local Data

Residents can track real-time and historical incident data through several channels:

  1. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department (LASD): As an unincorporated community, View Park-Windsor Hills is served by the LASD — not the LAPD. The LASD website provides station-level crime summaries and contact information for the relevant patrol bureau.
  2. CrimeMapping.com: Aggregates LASD-reported incidents into an interactive map with date filters, crime-type filters, and exportable reports.
  3. Los Angeles County Open Data Portal: Offers downloadable datasets for deeper analysis of incident trends over time.

What the D+ Grade Means for Homebuyers and Renters

With a median home value of $795,953 and a median rent of $1,624, View Park-Windsor Hills commands premium prices. The D+ crime grade is a factor prospective residents should weigh explicitly. It does not mean the community is dangerous in an absolute sense — the majority of blocks experience few incidents in any given month — but it does mean that property crime risk is meaningfully higher than in comparably priced communities. Buyers and renters should consult the crime map for the specific block or street they are evaluating, since the View Park hilltop and the Windsor Hills flatlands carry different risk profiles.

Community Safety Strategies That Work Here

Given that property crime dominates the incident profile, the most effective personal safety measures are property-focused:

  • Vehicle Security: Use steering-wheel locks, GPS trackers, and avoid leaving valuables visible — auto theft and smash-and-grab theft from vehicles are the most common incident types in Windsor Hills.
  • Home Hardening: Reinforced door frames, deadbolt upgrades, and motion-activated lighting reduce burglary risk, particularly on properties with side-yard or rear-yard access common in View Park's larger lots.
  • Neighborhood Watch Coordination: View Park's block associations have historically maintained active watch networks. Windsor Hills residents benefit from connecting with these programs through the LASD's community liaison office.
  • Report Early, Report Often: Non-emergency reporting of suspicious activity helps the LASD allocate patrol resources and builds the data record that informs future crime mapping.

The Bigger Picture: Affluence, Unemployment, and Crime

One of the more analytically interesting aspects of View Park-Windsor Hills is the coexistence of high wealth indicators and an elevated unemployment rate of 11.5%. This divergence — high home values and incomes alongside joblessness above typical suburban norms — suggests a community where economic stratification may be sharper than aggregate figures imply. Research consistently links unemployment to property crime rates, and the D+ grade may partly reflect this dynamic. Community investment in local employment pipelines and economic mobility programs could, over time, move the needle on the crime grade more sustainably than enforcement alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions: View Park-Windsor Hills Crime & Safety (2026)

What is View Park-Windsor Hills' overall crime grade in 2026?

View Park-Windsor Hills earns an overall crime grade of D+ for 2026. This places the community in the lower tier of California localities when it comes to public safety performance. The grade is driven primarily by property crime — burglary, vehicle theft, and theft from vehicles — rather than violent crime, which remains a smaller share of total incidents. For a community with a median household income of $95,977 and a median home value of nearly $796,000, the D+ grade stands out as a meaningful gap between economic profile and safety performance.

Is View Park-Windsor Hills safe to live in?

Safety in View Park-Windsor Hills is best described as uneven rather than uniformly poor or uniformly good. The View Park hilltop — with its historic mid-century homes, limited through-streets, and active block associations — experiences lower incident rates and represents the safer end of the community's spectrum. Windsor Hills, particularly near commercial corridors like Crenshaw Boulevard, sees higher concentrations of auto-related theft and opportunistic property crime. The D+ overall grade means residents should take property security seriously, but the community is not characterized by high rates of violent crime. Standard precautions — secured vehicles, reinforced entry points, neighborhood watch participation — go a long way here.

What types of crime are most common in View Park-Windsor Hills?

Property crime dominates the incident profile. Vehicle theft and theft from vehicles are the most frequently reported offense types, concentrated especially in the flatter Windsor Hills section near major streets. Residential burglary is the next most common category, with incidents spread more broadly across both View Park and Windsor Hills. Violent crime — assaults and robberies — represents a smaller proportion of total incidents and tends to occur near commercial and transit corridors rather than in the interior residential blocks. Drug-related offenses are also present but are not the primary driver of the community's D+ grade.

Which neighborhoods in View Park-Windsor Hills are safest?

Based on incident distribution visible in the crime map, View Park — the hillside section with larger lots, winding streets, and limited cut-through traffic — consistently shows lower crime density than the community average. Its natural topography and tight-knit residential character create passive deterrents. Windsor Hills is generally safe within its interior residential blocks but sees elevated property crime rates along its commercial edges. When evaluating a specific address, always consult the crime map at the block level, since conditions can vary significantly within even a few hundred feet in this geographically varied community.

How does View Park-Windsor Hills' crime rate compare to the rest of Los Angeles County?

View Park-Windsor Hills' D+ grade places it below the median for Los Angeles County communities of comparable wealth. Affluent unincorporated communities with similar median home values and household incomes typically score in the C to B range. The gap is largely attributable to the community's 11.5% unemployment rate — elevated for a neighborhood at this income level — which research links to higher rates of opportunistic property crime. The community's 9.6% poverty rate is relatively modest, suggesting the unemployment dynamic is a more significant factor than deep poverty in explaining the crime profile.

Is View Park-Windsor Hills served by the LAPD or the LA County Sheriff?

View Park-Windsor Hills is an unincorporated community within Los Angeles County, meaning it is served by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department (LASD), not the Los Angeles Police Department. This is an important distinction when consulting crime maps and data sources — residents should use LASD resources and contact the relevant LASD patrol bureau for non-emergency reporting, community liaison services, and neighborhood watch coordination. The LASD's website at lasd.org is the primary official resource for local crime data.

Is View Park-Windsor Hills a good place to buy a home given the D+ crime grade?

The decision depends heavily on which part of the community you are considering and your personal risk tolerance. The median home value of $795,953 reflects genuine demand for the area's architectural character, lot sizes, and community identity — and that demand has proven durable despite the crime grade. Buyers focused on the View Park hilltop will find a meaningfully safer micro-environment than the community-wide D+ suggests. Those considering Windsor Hills properties near commercial corridors should price in the higher property crime exposure and budget accordingly for security improvements. In either case, reviewing the crime map at the specific block level before making an offer is strongly advised.

Surrounding Cities

Crime in all USA States