Honolulu Crime Map: Live Community Reports Across Oahu
The Stolen Stuff Hawaii crime map shows live community-reported incidents across Honolulu and the rest of Oahu, alongside the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed (refreshed every 15 minutes). Browse by neighborhood, filter by category, and see which areas have the most recent activity. Coverage includes Downtown Honolulu, Waikiki, Kakaako, Kalihi, Kaneohe, Kailua, Pearl City, Kapolei, Waipahu, Ewa Beach, Mililani, and every Oahu region.
What the map shows
Each marker represents a community-reported incident: stolen vehicle, burglary, package theft, vehicle break-in, missing person, lost pet, scam alert, or active police dispatch. Markers are color-coded by category.
Click any marker to see the full report: date, time, location, description, photos when available, and links to the original community post on Facebook, Instagram, or X.
The map also shows live Honolulu Police Department dispatch activity. These are public-safety calls in progress and update every 15 minutes from the official HPD feed.
How to use the map
Open the map at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/map. Pan and zoom to your neighborhood.
Use the category filter to show only the incident types you care about (vehicle theft, burglary, package theft, lost pets, etc.).
Toggle the heatmap layer to see incident density by area instead of individual markers. Useful for identifying which neighborhoods have higher recent activity.
Use the time-of-day animation to see when incidents occur. Many vehicle break-ins, for example, cluster in early-morning hours at trailheads and beach parking lots.
Plan a driving route that avoids high-incident corridors using the built-in route planner.
Coverage by Oahu region
The map covers every Oahu neighborhood. Higher activity areas include Honolulu (downtown, Waikiki, Kakaako, Kalihi, Chinatown), Kapolei and the Ewa Plain (rapid residential growth, package theft hotspots), Pearl City and Waipahu (vehicle break-ins near shopping centers), Kaneohe and Kailua (vehicle break-ins at trailheads and beach parking), and Wahiawa / Mililani (rural break-in patterns).
Data sources
The map combines two data feeds. Community reports come from the Stolen Stuff Hawaii volunteer network across Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok, and direct submissions at reportssh.com. Active police dispatch data comes from the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed via the City and County of Honolulu open data portal, refreshed every 15 minutes. Reports include geocoding for accurate mapping using a three-tier cascade: internal cache, OpenStreetMap, and Google Maps.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I find a live crime map for Honolulu?
The Stolen Stuff Hawaii crime map at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com/map shows live community-reported incidents across Oahu plus the Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed, refreshed every 15 minutes. Filter by category, neighborhood, and date range.
Is the Honolulu crime map free?
Yes. The map is free to use and requires no account. Email and push notification alerts are also free.
How current is the Honolulu crime map data?
Community reports appear within minutes of being reviewed by SSH volunteers. The Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed refreshes every 15 minutes from the official open data portal.
Which Oahu neighborhoods have the highest reported crime?
Downtown Honolulu, Waikiki, and Kalihi tend to show the highest volume of community-reported incidents, followed by Kapolei and Pearl City for vehicle and package theft. The map heatmap layer visualizes density by area.
Can I get alerts when a crime is reported near me?
Yes. Set up free email or push notification alerts at search.stolenstuffhawaii.com, filtered by category and island or neighborhood.
Does the map include calls to 911?
The map includes the public Honolulu Police Department dispatch feed, which shows non-confidential calls in progress. It does not include confidential investigations or sensitive case details.
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