Crime Statistics for High Marnham, Nottinghamshire, Nottinghamshire, 2024

This is our street level crime statistics overview for High Marnham in September 2024. There were a total of 4 incidents. See where they were on the map below and broken down by categories. The largest category was Violent Crime, followed by Other Theft.

Although violent crime represents the largest incidents category in High Marnham, this category is usually the largest in any urban area. This is partly because 'Violent Crime' covers so many offences compared to say Burglary

Crime CategoryIncidents
Violent Crime3
Other Theft1
All Crime4

Map of street level crime incidents in September 2024

Police data is divided in Policing Neighbourhoods. We have taken the 'best fit' neighbourhood that includes High Marnham. This map shows if incidents are evenly distributed over the district or if there are hot spots in certain streets or areas.

Where Police data is not specific to an address for privacy reasons, most roads are represented by 1 to 2 markers or clusters. However, this should be enough to ascertain if the road you live in or are thinking of moving to, is a crime hot spot. The only exception could be where there is a large cluster of a single crime category on a street, as this could but not necessarily be related to multiple incidents at one address.



Crime incidents in neighbouring areas to High Marnham

We've taken the ten nearest places to High Marnham and ranked them by the number of crime incidents in each. This should allow you to see if High Marnham has more crime than other surrounding areas.

LocationCrime Incidents
Dunham on Trent (2.56 miles)10
Church Laneham (3.78 miles)8
High Marnham4
Laughterton (3.62 miles)2
Kettlethorpe (3.97 miles)2
Newton on Trent (3.1 miles)2
Grassthorpe (1.96 miles)2
Stokeham (3.93 miles)1
Spalford (1.96 miles)0
North Scarle (3.51 miles)0

3.15%
of Tuxford and Trent residents were born outside of the UK, according to the 2021 Census



Where are the most violent places near High Marnham?

The category of crime that most concerns people is violent crime. We have taken the ten nearest place to High Marnham and ranked them according to the number of violent incidents in the 'best fit' Policing neighbourhood.

LocationViolent Incidents
Church Laneham10
Dunham on Trent4
High Marnham3
Laughterton1
Kettlethorpe1
Newton on Trent1
Grassthorpe0
Stokeham0
Spalford0
North Scarle0

How likely are you to be a victim of crime in High Marnham?

Every two years the government publishes the Index of Multiple Deprivation. One of those domains is crime, more precisely, how likely you are to be the victim of a what is known as 'personal crime', such as muggings or burglary. The governemnt publish these statitsics down to the Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) or in simple geographic terms, a few roads. These statistics are also published on a ward level as an average of the LSOAs in that area. We have taken the average rank and converted it into a more accessble form, a score out of 100. Where the higher the score, the more likely you are in High Marnham to be a victim of personal crime. Note that the following score has been generated from the 2019 statistics. At the time of writing, these have not been updated by the government during and since the COVID 19 pandemic.

How does crime in High Marnham compare to surrounding wards?

We have taken the 10 nearest wards to High Marnham and ranked them using our crime score based on the Index of Multiple Deprivation average rank for the ward.High Marnham is ranked #6.

#WardScore
1Welbeck73
2Boughton54
3Birchwood48
4East Markham40
5Rampton29
6Tuxford and Trent23
7Collingham21
8Sutton-on-Trent21
9Muskham20
10Eagle, Swinderby and Witham St Hughs18
11Sturton6

Which road in High Marnham has the highest level of crime?

We have used the Index of Multiple Deprivation to find the Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) in High Marnham with the highest crime score. Accoding to the 2019 statistics, that is in and around this marker.

Last updated: September 2024
Information provided by data.police.uk
Published under the Open Government Licence v3.0