Denver · annual report

Denver Crime Rate — 2025 in Review

A year of crime trends, summarized.

An annual companion to the monthly briefings: the anomalies that mattered, the structural shifts that emerged, and where the model got it right (or wrong). 12 briefings, condensed.

01

The big picture

Denver closed 2025 with 40,563 bucketed incidents down 9.9% against 45,023 the year before. 2,662 tracked signals were raised across 12 briefings — 240 spikes, 2191 drops + sustained shifts, and 27 rare-event / streak-break signals.

The monthly volume chart at right shows where the year was busy and where it was quiet, against the prior-year monthly average (dashed line). The categories that moved most are broken out below.

FIG 1.1 · MONTHLY INCIDENT VOLUME · 2025VS 2024
1035206931044138JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecprior year monthly avg
−9.9%total volume vs 2024
40,563total incidents
2,662signals tracked
8baselines reset
77%forecast accuracy
41 / 41neighborhoods covered
03

Crime by category

All ten categories, ranked by 2025 total volume.

#CategoryYear totalYoYTrendNote
01Other Larceny11,741+8%Up 8% vs 2024. 164 spikes this year.
02Theft from Vehicle7,981−10%Down 10% vs 2024. 4 spikes this year.
03Vandalism7,402−4%Down 4% vs 2024. 9 spikes this year.
04Motor Vehicle Theft5,525−36%Down 36% vs 2024. 1 below-trend month.
05Burglary4,174−15%Down 15% vs 2024. 28 spikes this year.
06Aggravated Assault2,583−4%Down 4% vs 2024. 16 spikes this year.
07Robbery957−20%Down 20% vs 2024. 7 spikes this year.
08Arson162+36%Up 36% vs 2024. 4 rare-event flags.
09Homicide38−39%Down 39% vs 2024. 3 rare-event flags.
05

Crime forecast scorecard

Of 107 monthly point-estimate forecasts issued for 2025, 82 (77%) landed inside their 95% prediction intervals. Below: month by month.

Jan
7/9
Feb
6/9
Mar
7/9
Apr
8/9
May
8/9
Jun
9/9
Jul
8/9
Aug
6/9
Sep
7/9
Oct
6/9
Nov
5/9
Dec
5/8
Inside 95% CI Outside 95% CI (model miss)

Per-bucket coverage, MAPE, and bias details live on the methodology page.

06

Methodology updates

Logged inline with the code that runs the model.

  • 2025

    10-bucket NIBRS-aligned categories

    Replaced an earlier 6-bucket scheme (which collapsed homicide, robbery, aggravated assault, and sexual assault into one “violent” bucket). Each bucket now maps to FBI UCR Part 1 / NIBRS Group A — the cross-city common denominator for adding new cities.

    VIEW DETAIL →
  • 2025

    Sustained-shift Poisson rate-ratio test

    Added a Poisson Z-test (|Z|>2.576, ratio differs by ≥25%) for sustained shifts between recent vs prior 12-mo windows — distinct from the spike/drop signals which compare against the multi-year baseline.

    VIEW DETAIL →
  • 2025

    Prophet forecasts with low-count gating

    Per-(neighborhood, bucket) forecasts now skip cells averaging <2 incidents/month over the trailing 24 months. Violent-bucket forecasts skip at the neighborhood level and surface via rare-event / streak-break signals instead.

    VIEW DETAIL →
07

What we'll watch in 2026

3 distinct patterns from 2025we expect to keep moving — drawn from the year's recurring sustained signals, not the single-month spikes already covered above.

  1. 01

    Montclair · burglary

    The past 12 months saw 72 incidents — about 77% above the 41 average from prior years. Surfaced in 3 of 2025's 12 briefings — the persistence is what puts it on the watch list.

  2. 02

    Mar Lee · other larceny

    The past 12 months saw 129 incidents — about 94% above the 67 average from prior years. Surfaced in 4 of 2025's 12 briefings — the persistence is what puts it on the watch list.

  3. 03

    Gateway - Green Valley Ranch · theft from vehicle

    The past 12 months saw 241 incidents — about 32% below the 352 average from prior years.

END OF REPORT · DENVER · 2025

Cite as: Public Analyst.ai, “Denver2025in review,” auto-generated annual report. Permanent URL: /denver/2025/year-in-review.

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