Abbotsford recorded 952 crime incidents in 2026. Theft was the most frequent category with 464 reports, accounting for nearly half of all incidents. Mischief followed with 233 cases. This is the only year of data available, so year-over-year trends cannot be assessed.
In 2026, Abbotsford recorded 952 reported incidents across all crime categories. This marks the first year of available data for the city, with no prior-year comparisons possible at this time.
This page details the types and frequency of incidents reported in Abbotsford during 2026, based on open data released by local law enforcement. The figures reflect raw incident counts, not per-capita rates, and cover all neighbourhoods within the city.
The 2026 dataset for Abbotsford shows theft as the most frequently reported incident type, accounting for nearly half of all records. Mischief and theft from vehicles also feature prominently, together making up over a third of the total. Break-and-enter and auto theft round out the top five categories, while violent crimes like robbery appear less frequently. With only one year of data available, long-term trends cannot yet be assessed.
Abbotsford's 2026 data highlights a strong concentration in property-related incidents, with theft alone accounting for nearly half of all reports. The dominance of theft and mischief—together comprising 73% of the total—suggests property crime is a key focus area. With only one year of data, it's unclear whether this distribution is typical, but the low count of violent crimes like robbery stands out. Future years will clarify whether this pattern persists.
Abbotsford recorded 952 incidents in 2026, the first year of available data for the city.
Trend direction cannot be determined yet, as 2026 is the only year of data currently available for Abbotsford.
Theft was the most reported category, with 464 incidents—nearly half of the year's total.
This data is sourced from open records released by law enforcement agencies in British Columbia (BC).
Data is sourced from open records published by law enforcement agencies in BC.