Safety index · Bronx, New York · data through March 2026
Is Melrose safe?
Melrose records a high level of reported crime for New York City. Its SafeRoute safety index is 20 out of 100 — 13 points below the citywide median of 33, ranking 192nd of 197 NYC neighborhoods — based on 2,675 incidents reported to the NYPD within 1 km of the neighborhood center (data through March 2026).
The largest reported category here is violent crime (17% of reports) — worth taking seriously when walking at night; the full mix is broken down below.
Reported incidents here skew to daytime and evening hours — only about 14% of severity-weighted reports fall overnight (midnight–6 a.m.).
Where incidents cluster
What's reported here
| Violent crime | 462 · 17% | |
| Public order | 643 · 24% | |
| Other theft | 665 · 25% | |
| Criminal damage & arson | 141 · 5% | |
| Drugs | 180 · 7% | |
| Vehicle crime | 210 · 8% |
When it happens
Severity-weighted share of reported incidents by time of day, from NYPD incident timestamps.
Walking in Melrose 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 StoreNearby areas
- Concourse-Concourse Village22/100 · High risk
- Morrisania21/100 · High risk
- Mott Haven-Port Morris22/100 · High risk
- Longwood22/100 · High risk
- Claremont Village-Claremont (East)23/100 · High risk
Common questions
Is Melrose safe at night?
High risk overall (safety index 20/100). About 45% of severity-weighted incidents in Melrose are reported between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m. At night, prefer lit, busier streets — a block or two of detour often avoids the clusters on the map above.
What is the most common crime in Melrose?
Violent crime — 462 of 2,675 incidents (17%) reported within 1 km of the neighborhood center through March 2026.
How is the Melrose safety index calculated?
SafeRoute weights each incident reported to the NYPD by severity (violence weighs more than shoplifting), sums the last available period within 1 km of the neighborhood center, and normalizes against citywide crime rates onto a 0–100 scale — higher is safer. It describes reported crime only; it is not a guarantee of safety.