SafeRoute

Safety index · Westminster, London · data through April 2026

Is Hyde Park safe?

Hyde Park records a high level of reported crime for Inner London. Its SafeRoute safety index is 24 out of 100 — 7 points below the Inner London median of 31, ranking 230th of 248 Inner London areas — based on 949 incidents reported to the police within 1 km of the neighbourhood centre (data through April 2026).

24/100
High risk
SafeRoute safety index for the area within 1 km of the centre of Hyde Park — higher is safer. 230th of 248 Inner London areas.

The largest reported category here is violent crime (15% of reports) — worth taking seriously when walking at night; the full mix is broken down below.

Where incidents cluster

Harrow RoadPark Lane neighbourhood centre 1 dot = 1 report · darker = more severe 500 m N ↑
949 incidents reported within 1 km of the Hyde Park centre (500 shown) · Police data through April 2026 · basemap © OpenStreetMap contributors. Reports cluster toward the north-east of the map — the area immediately around the neighbourhood centre is comparatively quiet.

What's reported here

Violent crime
140 · 15%
Theft from a person
146 · 15%
Anti-social behaviour
142 · 15%
Drugs
142 · 15%
Other theft
111 · 12%
Robbery
31 · 3%

Walking in Hyde Park at night?

SafeRoute scores every walking route against the same live crime data on this page — and shows how much of each route runs on lit streets. Pick the safer way, share your walk, and check in when you arrive. Free, no account.

Get SafeRoute on the App Store

Nearby areas

Common questions

Is Hyde Park safe at night?

High risk overall (safety index 24/100). At night, prefer lit, busier streets — a short detour often avoids the clusters on the map above.

What is the most common crime in Hyde Park?

Violent crime — 140 of 949 incidents (15%) reported within 1 km of the neighbourhood centre through April 2026.

How is the Hyde Park safety index calculated?

SafeRoute weights each police-recorded incident by severity (violence weighs more than shoplifting), sums the last available period within 1 km of the neighbourhood centre, and normalises against national crime rates onto a 0–100 scale — higher is safer. It describes reported crime only; it is not a guarantee of safety.