Abbotsford recorded 995 crime incidents between April 3 and June 2, 2026. Theft was the most common category, making up 49.4% of all reported incidents. This data reflects a 60-day window and includes only reported incidents.
Data current through . Source: official Abbotsford police open-data portal.
This map displays 995 reported incidents in Abbotsford, British Columbia, over a 60-day period from April 3 to June 2, 2026. The data is sourced from the Abbotsford Police Department’s public portal and reflects incidents recorded by local law enforcement. Residents and visitors can use this information to understand patterns of criminal activity across the city’s neighbourhoods and streets.
By visualizing where and how often different types of incidents occur, the map helps identify areas with higher concentrations of activity. This can inform personal safety decisions and community discussions about policing priorities.
The dataset covers only April and May 2026, so no year-over-year comparison is available. The 995 incidents recorded during this two-month window provide a snapshot of recent activity but cannot indicate broader trends without additional historical data.
Theft was the most common incident type, accounting for 492 reports, or 49.4% of the total. Mischief followed with 228 incidents (22.9%), while theft from vehicles ranked third at 125 incidents (12.6%). Together, these three categories made up 84.9% of all reported incidents in the period. Break and enter (79 incidents, 7.9%) and auto theft (48 incidents, 4.8%) were also notable, though less frequent.
The highest concentration of incidents occurred along South Fraser Way, with the 32900 block reporting 67 incidents, the 32700 block recording 40, and the 32500 block seeing 35. These figures reflect raw counts, not per-capita risk, and highlight areas where activity was most frequently reported during the two-month window.
Theft dominates Abbotsford’s recent crime data, accounting for nearly half of all incidents, with mischief and vehicle-related theft also prominent. The concentration of activity along South Fraser Way—particularly the 32900 block—stands out, though this reflects raw incident counts rather than population-adjusted risk. With only two months of data, long-term trends cannot be assessed, but the heavy tilt toward property crime is clear. The low violent incident count (14) suggests most reported activity involved theft or vandalism.
There were 995 reported incidents in Abbotsford between April 3, 2026, and June 2, 2026. This figure includes all categories of incidents, with theft being the most common, accounting for 492 reports.
Theft is the most frequently reported incident in Abbotsford, making up 49.4% of all incidents. Mischief follows as the second most common, with 228 reports, and theft from vehicles ranks third with 125 incidents.
The data for 2026 shows a total of 995 incidents over a 60-day period. However, year-over-year comparisons are not available, as this is the only year with data in the current dataset.
The 32900 Block of South Fraser Way had the highest number of incidents, with 67 reports. Other areas with notable counts include the 32700 Block of South Fraser Way (40 incidents) and the 2800 Block of Gladwin Road (38 incidents).
The data covers incidents reported between April 3, 2026, and June 2, 2026. This 60-day window provides a recent snapshot of activity in the city.
The data is sourced from open-data records provided by the BC government. It includes all reported incidents within the specified time frame and is updated regularly to reflect new reports.
Data sourced from the BC government’s open-data portal.