

Detroit, Michigan is the largest city in the state and the county seat of Wayne County, with a population of 639,111 (2020 U.S. Census) across 139 square miles. The Detroit-Warren-Dearborn metropolitan area is home to over 4 million residents and serves as headquarters for 17 Fortune 500 companies, including the Big Three automakers — General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis. This concentration of corporate operations, manufacturing facilities, and logistics infrastructure makes Detroit a high-priority location for enterprise security teams. Base Operations assigns Detroit a BaseScore of 52/100 (Tier 3: Moderate), with 19,491 total threat incidents recorded across the city in 2025.
Detroit logged 19,491 criminal incidents in 2025 across property crime, violent crime, and regulatory offenses — averaging 1,624 per month. The city's BaseScore of 52/100 (Tier 3: Moderate) reflects a threat environment where Property Crime drives over half of all activity at 53.4% (10,407 incidents), but threat levels vary dramatically within the city at the sub-mile level. Security teams evaluating Detroit for operations, travel, or site selection need street-level intelligence to assess risk across their specific operating locations.
Detroit's BaseScore of 52/100 places the city in Tier 3: Moderate on the Base Operations risk scale. In 2025, the city recorded 19,491 total incidents across three primary categories: Property Crime (53.4%, 10,407 incidents), Violent Crime (32.3%, 6,294 incidents), and Regulatory Offenses (14.3%, 2,790 incidents).
BaseScore is a standardized 0–100 risk rating that enables security teams to compare threat levels across any global location using the same validated methodology. Normalized for population density, weighted by crime severity, and updated monthly from 25,000+ sources, BaseScore delivers the consistent, granular intelligence that replaces fragmented government statistics and expensive consulting assessments. Learn more about our methodology
| Tier | Score Range | Risk Label |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0–20 | Minimal |
| 2 | 21–40 | Low |
| 3 | 41–60 | Moderate ← Detroit |
| 4 | 61–80 | High |
| 5 | 81–100 | Critical |
Intelligence Disclaimer: The following news items are sourced via AI agent analysis of open sources. Confidence levels reflect source reliability — High: government or Base Operations verified data; Medium: multiple corroborating sources; Low: single source or extrapolated. AI agents can provide incorrect or misleading information. For verified, up-to-date threat analysis, use the Base Operations platform.
Source: Detroit Free Press | Date: 2026-01-15 | Confidence: Medium
Security implication: Increased pedestrian-targeted robbery in downtown Detroit reinforces the value of street-level intelligence for ground transportation route planning — a city-level risk rating would miss this localized spike.
Detroit Police Department increased patrols in downtown areas following a series of robberies targeting pedestrians in early January 2026. Authorities are urging the public to report suspicious activity.
Source: The Detroit News | Date: 2026-01-25 | Confidence: Medium
Security implication: Concentrated weekend violence creates elevated risk windows — proactive teams use rolling trend data to identify these patterns before they escalate.
Multiple shootings over the January 23–24 weekend resulted in several injuries and one fatality. Community leaders are organizing town halls to demand stronger public safety measures.
Source: WXYZ Detroit | Date: 2026-02-10 | Confidence: Medium
Security implication: Expanded gunshot detection and camera coverage may improve response times in covered neighborhoods, but coverage gaps persist — sub-mile data helps identify which blocks benefit.
Detroit deployed advanced surveillance technology including real-time cameras and gunshot detection in high-crime neighborhoods in February 2026. The initiative targets reduced police response times.
Source: MLive | Date: 2026-02-20 | Confidence: Medium
Security implication: Declining property crime and persistent violent crime create a shifting threat mix — teams relying on annual assessments will miss this trend that monthly BaseScore updates capture.
A Detroit Police Department report shows declining property crime in early 2026, while violent crimes including assaults and homicides remain persistent. Community programs are expanding to address root causes.
Source: Fox 2 Detroit | Date: 2026-03-05 | Confidence: Medium
Security implication: Firearm-related incidents in residential areas underscore why street-level granularity matters — threat conditions can shift within a single mile of a corporate facility or housing location.
A fatal shooting in a Detroit neighborhood on March 4 left one dead and two injured. The incident reignited local debates over Michigan gun control policies.
Detroit recorded 19,491 total incidents across three primary threat categories in 2025. Property Crime led at 53.4% with 10,407 incidents, followed by Violent Crime at 32.3% (6,294) and Regulatory Offenses at 14.3% (2,790). The city averaged 1,624 incidents per month.
| Category | 2025 Incidents | % of Total | Monthly Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property Crime | 10,407 | 53.4% | 867 |
| Violent Crime | 6,294 | 32.3% | 525 |
| Regulatory Offenses | 2,790 | 14.3% | 233 |
| Total | 19,491 | 100% | 1,624 |
Data source: Base Operations platform, January–December 2025, Detroit city-level.
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