SafeRoute

Safety index · Islington, London · data through April 2026

Is Tollington safe?

Tollington records more reported crime than most London neighbourhoods. Its SafeRoute safety index is 26 out of 100 — 5 points below the Inner London median of 31, ranking 216th of 248 Inner London areas — based on 778 incidents reported to the police within 1 km of the neighbourhood centre (data through April 2026).

26/100
Elevated
SafeRoute safety index for the area within 1 km of the centre of Tollington — higher is safer. 216th of 248 Inner London areas.

Most of what's reported here is property-related — anti-social behaviour alone is 33% of reports — rather than violence against strangers, though the full mix below is worth a look.

Where incidents cluster

Holloway RoadSeven Sisters Road neighbourhood centre 1 dot = 1 report · darker = more severe 500 m N ↑
778 incidents reported within 1 km of the Tollington centre (500 shown) · Police data through April 2026 · basemap © OpenStreetMap contributors.

What's reported here

Anti-social behaviour
259 · 33%
Violent crime
121 · 16%
Robbery
33 · 4%
Theft from a person
47 · 6%
Criminal damage & arson
32 · 4%
Burglary
29 · 4%

Walking in Tollington 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.

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Nearby areas

Common questions

Is Tollington safe at night?

Elevated overall (safety index 26/100). At night, prefer lit, busier streets — a short detour often avoids the clusters on the map above.

What is the most common crime in Tollington?

Anti-social behaviour — 259 of 778 incidents (33%) reported within 1 km of the neighbourhood centre through April 2026.

How is the Tollington 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.