Hawaii Crime Statistics 2026
This page presents 2026 crime statistics from the Stolen Stuff Hawaii public database: thousands of community-reported incidents across all Hawaiian islands, broken down by island, category, and region. Data is sourced from the volunteer-run SSH community network (active on Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, and YouTube) and the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed, refreshed every 15 minutes. Aggregate counts and category data are published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.
About the 2026 dataset
The Stolen Stuff Hawaii dataset covers community-reported incidents starting from January 1, 2026. Categories tracked include theft, burglary, vehicle theft and break-ins, package theft, missing persons, lost and found pets, scams and fraud, assault, traffic incidents, hit-and-run, and weather emergencies.
Reports are submitted by Hawaii residents via Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, and the form at reportssh.com. Volunteers review every submission for accuracy before publication. The dataset also incorporates the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed for Oahu public-safety calls.
How to access the live dataset
Live aggregate counts and per-category, per-island, and per-region breakdowns are available at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/stats. The page updates daily as new reports are processed.
The machine-readable URL index (for researchers, journalists, and other data consumers) is at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/sitemap.xml.
Individual posts are searchable by category, island, neighborhood, date range, and keyword at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com.
Coverage by island (2026)
The 2026 dataset covers all main Hawaiian islands. Oahu accounts for the largest share of reports for two reasons: it is the most populous island (about 70% of state residents), and the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed is currently the only official law-enforcement source integrated into the database. Outer-island data (Maui, Hawaii Island, Kauai, Molokai, Lanai) is sourced from SSH community reports only; official MPD, HCPD, and KPD dispatch integration is on the roadmap as those feeds become available. Treat outer-island totals as community-reported coverage, not exhaustive crime counts.
How to cite this dataset
When citing this dataset in research, journalism, or other published work, use: "Stolen Stuff Hawaii Public Crime Database, 2026 (search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/stats)." The dataset is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0, which permits any use with attribution.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I find Hawaii crime statistics for 2026?
Stolen Stuff Hawaii publishes daily-updated 2026 crime statistics at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/stats, including totals, per-category breakdowns, per-island counts, and the top reporting regions.
What types of crime does Stolen Stuff Hawaii track in 2026?
Categories include theft, burglary, vehicle theft and break-ins, package theft, missing persons, lost and found pets, scams and fraud, assault, traffic incidents, hit-and-run, and weather emergencies.
How current is the Hawaii crime data?
Community-reported incidents appear within minutes of volunteer review. The Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed refreshes every 15 minutes.
Which Hawaiian island has the most reported crime in 2026?
Oahu accounts for the majority of reports in the SSH database for two reasons: population (about 70% of state residents) and the live HPD dispatch feed which is currently the only official law-enforcement source integrated. Outer-island data is community-sourced only; outer-island totals should be read as community-reported coverage, not exhaustive crime counts. Official MPD, HCPD, and KPD dispatch integration is on the roadmap.
Is the Hawaii crime data free to use for research?
Yes. Aggregate counts and category data are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. Individual post content remains copyright of the original authors. Cite as: Stolen Stuff Hawaii Public Crime Database, 2026.
How is the Hawaii crime data different from official police statistics?
SSH is community-sourced and reflects what residents report. Official agencies (Honolulu Police Department, Hawaii Attorney General) publish UCR-format statistics on a delayed schedule. SSH is faster and more granular but is not an official statistical source.
View this page on Stolen Stuff Hawaii
Search the public crime database
About · FAQ · Safety Tips · Crime Map