Top 100 US Cities

Crime in all USA States

Frequently Asked Questions About Crime Data

What is the DoorProfit crime map?

The DoorProfit crime map is an interactive, address-level visualization of crime incidents across the United States. It aggregates data from state and local law enforcement agencies, the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program, and the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) into a single searchable heat map covering 25,000+ U.S. cities and 30 million+ incidents.

How are safety grades calculated?

Safety grades (A+ through F) are calculated from each city's or neighborhood's crime rate per 100,000 residents, weighted for violent-crime severity and benchmarked against national FBI UCR averages (total 2,212.8, violent 380.7, property 1,832.1 per 100K). Grades also factor in the 12-month trend and population-size percentile ranking.

How often is crime data updated?

The DoorProfit crime map ingests incident reports from law enforcement feeds daily. Aggregate statistics (year-over-year rate comparisons) refresh at least monthly, and safety grades recalculate as new incidents are ingested.

Is DoorProfit's crime data free?

Yes. Anyone can run free searches without an account. Signing up for a free account unlocks additional searches. An $8/month subscription (cancel anytime) unlocks unlimited address lookups, violent-crime alerts, and registered-offender move-in notifications.

Which cities does the crime map cover?

The crime map covers 25,000+ U.S. cities and is searchable by full street address, city, zip code, or neighborhood. Coverage is most comprehensive in metros where state and local agencies report to NIBRS/UCR, which as of 2025 includes all 50 states.

How does DoorProfit compare to NeighborhoodScout, CrimeGrade, AreaVibes, or SpotCrime?

DoorProfit combines a live incident-level heat map with A+ to F safety grades and a real estate deal analyzer in one platform, whereas most competitors specialize in one of those three views. DoorProfit also surfaces registered offender data alongside crime incidents, which is useful for families relocating with children.