Toronto recorded 5,840 crime incidents between January 30 and March 31, 2026. Assault was the most frequent category, accounting for 53.5% of all reported incidents. The data covers 159 neighbourhoods, with Mimico-Queensway reporting the highest count at 162 incidents.
Data current through . Source: official Toronto police open-data portal.
This map displays 5,840 reported incidents across Toronto over a 60-day window from January 30 to March 31, 2026. The data is sourced from the Toronto Police Service’s public portal and reflects incidents with usable location and date information. While not exhaustive, the dataset provides a snapshot of crime patterns across the city’s 159 neighbourhoods.
Residents, researchers, and policymakers can use this tool to identify trends, compare neighbourhoods, and understand the distribution of different incident types. The figures represent raw counts, not crime rates, and do not account for population differences between areas.
The 2026 dataset covers a 60-day window, with 5,732 incidents having usable dates. Without prior-year comparisons in this dataset, trends cannot be assessed. The figures represent a static snapshot rather than a year-over-year change.
Assault was the most reported incident type, accounting for 3,124 cases, or 53.5% of the total. Auto theft followed with 1,092 incidents (18.7%), while break and enter ranked third at 1,006 incidents (17.2%). Together, these three categories made up nearly 90% of all reported incidents in the period. Robbery, theft, and theft from vehicle comprised the remaining share, with robbery at 320 incidents (5.5%) and theft at 194 (3.3%).
The highest concentrations of incidents were in Mimico-Queensway (162), West Humber-Clairville (137), and Yonge-Bay Corridor (124). These counts reflect total reported incidents, not per-capita risk, and highlight areas with greater activity during the 60-day window.
Assault dominates Toronto’s early 2026 incident counts, comprising over half of all reports—a striking contrast to property crimes like auto theft and break-and-enter, which still rank highly. The 5,840 total reflects a concentrated 60-day window, limiting broader trend claims. Mimico-Queensway and West Humber-Clairville stand out for activity volume, but without population data, these figures only indicate raw counts, not relative risk. The absence of year-over-year data means comparisons are not possible, leaving this as a standalone snapshot.
There were 5,840 reported incidents in Toronto from January 30, 2026, to March 31, 2026. Of these, 5,732 had specific dates, while 108 did not.
Assault was the most reported incident type, with 3,124 cases, accounting for 53.5% of all incidents. Auto theft followed with 1,092 incidents (18.7%), and break and enter with 1,006 incidents (17.2%).
Mimico-Queensway (160) had the highest count with 162 incidents, followed by West Humber-Clairville (1) with 137 and Yonge-Bay Corridor (170) with 124.
The dataset includes 5,732 incidents from 2026, but year-over-year comparisons are not available for this period.
This data covers incidents from January 30, 2026, to March 31, 2026, and was last updated on May 16, 2026.
The data is sourced from open-data releases by the Toronto Police Service, compiled and standardized by CrimeMaps.ca.
Data sourced from the Toronto Police Service open-data portal (ON).