In 2026, Halton Region recorded 135 break and enter incidents, representing 3.7% of the city's total crime count of 3,657. This category ranked 6th among 8 crime types, with Burlington and Oakville reporting the highest counts.
Data current through . Source: official Halton Region police open-data portal.
This page covers reported break and enter incidents in Halton Region, Ontario. During the selected window, there were 135 reported incidents of break and enter. These incidents account for 3.7% of the total reported incidents in Halton Region during this period.
Break and enter is one of the categories tracked in Halton Region, providing insight into property-related crimes in the area.
In Halton Region, break and enter ranks as the 6th most common category among the 8 tracked. It is less frequent than other categories such as 'Other' (2,597 incidents), 'Auto theft' (267 incidents), 'Theft' (264 incidents), 'Mischief' (183 incidents), and 'Theft from vehicle' (167 incidents). This places break and enter as a relatively less common category compared to others in the region.
Break and enter incidents in Halton Region account for a small portion of the total reported incidents, making up 3.7%. The category ranks 6th among the 8 tracked, indicating it is less common compared to others like 'Other' and 'Auto theft'. The data shows that BURLINGTON has the highest number of incidents among neighbourhoods. The short reporting window of just over two months limits trend analysis, but the numbers provide a snapshot of break and enter activity in the region.
There were 135 reported break and enter incidents in Halton Region during the selected window.
Break and enter incidents account for 3.7% of the total reported incidents in Halton Region.
BURLINGTON has the highest number of break and enter incidents with 66 reported cases.
Break and enter is the 6th most common category, with fewer incidents than categories like 'Other' (2,597) and 'Auto theft' (267).
Data sourced from open data provided by the Government of Ontario (ON).