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Northern Cape Crime: What the Data Reveals

Over a decade of SAPS data across 92 precincts — patterns, shifts, and surprises

2013–202592 precincts4.6 million data points

The COVID Recovery Story

How did crime bounce back after lockdowns?

COVID lockdowns caused the single biggest crime drop in recorded Northern Cape history. But the recovery has been uneven. 29% of all precincts are still below their pre-COVID crime levels.

55%

Exceeded pre-COVID levels

50 precincts

16%

Recovered to pre-COVID levels

15 precincts

29%

Still below pre-COVID levels

26 precincts

Biggest overshoot

Petrusville surged +111.3% above pre-COVID levels

Biggest improvement

Boetsap dropped -84.2% and kept falling

Recovery by district

Frances Baard
-0.6% recovered
John Taolo Gaetsewe
+2.1% exceeded
Pixley ka Seme
+6.6% exceeded
Namakwa
+14.5% exceeded
ZF Mgcawu
+16.1% exceeded

Source: SAPS quarterly crime statistics, comparing 2019-2020 to 2022-2023 financial years. 91 precincts with complete data for both periods.

Crime Type Shifts

Crime isn't just changing in volume — it's changing in type

While total crime dropped, the composition of crime shifted dramatically. The data shows a notable shift away from property crime toward violent crime categories.

Rising

Falling

Property vs violent crime — the gap is closing

Property crime made up 43% of combined property and violent crime in 2018-2019 — down to 40% by 2022-2023. Violent crime is taking a larger share.

Inverse trends: burglary down, robbery up

In 5 precincts, burglary decreased over 15% while robbery increased over 15% — a pattern worth monitoring.

Deben
Burglary -71%Robbery +33%
Groblershoop
Burglary -53%Robbery +125%
Port Nolloth
Burglary -42%Robbery +225%
Kleinsee
Burglary -38%Robbery +300%
Kuyasa
Burglary -22%Robbery +300%

Source: SAPS crime statistics, all 92 Northern Cape precincts, 2018-2019 vs 2022-2023 financial years.

Hidden Gems & Warning Signs

Who's getting better, who's getting worse?

The majority of precincts show a downward crime trajectory over 5 years. Only 7 are consistently worsening. Here are the standouts in both directions.

Top 10 consistent improvers

PrecinctDecline streakAvg. yearly drop
Heuningvlei5 years -12.7%
Kathu4 years -10.8%
Severn3 years -14%

7 precincts consistently worsening

PrecinctIncrease streakAvg. yearly rise
Petrusville3 years +28.9%
Kakamas3 years +21.2%
Nieuwoudtville3 years +14.2%
Pofadder3 years +13.4%
Fraserburg3 years +13.2%
Keimoes3 years +11.9%
Augrabies3 years +10.4%

Biggest warning sign: Petrusville

Petrusville has averaged +29% annual crime growth over 3 consecutive years of increase — the most sustained worsening trend in the province.

The Trend Surprises

High-crime areas improving, low-crime areas worsening — the trends defy expectations

Some of the Northern Cape's highest-crime precincts are showing the biggest improvements, while several traditionally quiet areas are seeing sharp increases. The data challenges assumptions about which areas are getting safer.

Surprising movers

In Apr–Dec 2025, Nababeep — a High crime precinct — saw crime drop 25.6% vs Apr–Dec 2024. Meanwhile, historically quiet Lime Acres (Low crime) surged +70%.

Source: SAPS crime statistics, 2025-2026 vs previous year. "High-crime" = precincts classified as High or Very High crime volume (top 40%). "Low-crime" = precincts classified as Very Low or Low (bottom 40%).

Explore individual precincts

Search for any suburb or precinct to see its full crime statistics

Data Sources & Methodology

  • Crime data: SAPS quarterly crime statistics (2013-2025), publicly available at saps.gov.za
  • Population data: Stats SA Census 2022 Municipal Factsheet
  • All comparisons use complete 4-quarter financial years unless otherwise noted
  • Correlation analysis uses Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients
  • SAPS data reflects reported crime only. Under-reporting varies by area and crime type.
  • This analysis is for informational purposes only and should not be used as the sole basis for safety or property decisions. Full disclaimer
  • Full methodology →