DENVER–Recently released data shows while crime in Colorado has declined modestly since the pandemic, the state still ranks in the top ten in the nation for both property and violent crime.
According to an April report from the Common Sense Institute, using Colorado Bureau of Investigations (CBI) 2025 data and Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) 2024 data, Colorado nationally ranks third in property crime and eighth in violent crime, with overall crime costing the average Coloradan $4,627, and $27 billion statewide.
Violent crime peaked in Colorado during the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic, but these crimes, such as murder, rape, and robbery all decreased by at least 30% overall since 2021.
Despite Colorado ranking nationally at third, property crime is the lowest it’s been since 2008. Crimes such as burglary, property damage, vehicle theft, and arson, were at their highest in 2021 but have since declined 35%. Colorado’s ten most populated counties all showed a decrease in property crime, though some remain high relative to statewide level.
Statewide, crimes like wire fraud, shoplifting, blackmail, extortion, and computer hacking have all increased since the 2021 peak.
“Colorado’s continued high ranking in both violent and property crime relative to other states suggests that the state is following a broader national trend more than experiencing a meaningful improvement in its relative public safety standing,” the report reads in part.
Expert weighs in
Mitch Morrissey, one of the authors of the report, and a former elected Denver District Attorney, says Colorado’s crime surge during the pandemic is attributed to variety of state laws and policies.
“Bond reform allowed individuals arrested and charged with crimes back out on the streets almost immediately, leading to further criminal activity,” Morrisey told Complete Colorado, adding that lowering penalties for possession of illicit drugs from felonies to misdemeanors made it harder to get addicts clean and sober.
“Stripping law enforcement officers of civil immunity and making them personally liable for mistakes has led to reduced proactive policing,” continued Morrisey, noting that New Mexico and Colorado, two of the highest ranked states in aggregate crime, have led the way in stripping police officers of civil immunity.
Morrisey notes that the decline in crime since the pandemic has come, at least in part, from policing agencies offering recruitment incentives, and Colorado increasing the penalty for automobile theft.
However, despite these numbers decreasing statewide, Colorado remains one of the highest crime states in the nation,
“Colorado may have instituted more ‘pro-criminal reforms’ than other states, and we are not seeing the same level of reduction in crime as states that did not institute those policies,” Morrisey concluded.

