North Carolina ยท 26,007 residents

Crime Map and Safety Score for Montgomery County, North Carolina

Browse neighborhood-by-neighborhood crime scores for every Census block group in Montgomery County. Severity-weighted and rate-normalized, built for real estate, PropTech, and location intelligence workflows.

Risk Score

0 Safe 100 Dangerous
Powered by CrimeScore.io

Montgomery County, North Carolina local context

Montgomery County, North Carolina is a smaller county market, with an estimated 26,007 residents across 10,643 households based on 2024 ACS 5-year profile data.

Owner-occupied housing makes up the larger share of occupied homes at 75%, while renter-occupied housing accounts for 25%.

The county profile also includes broad socioeconomic context, including a 16.3% poverty rate, a 2.8% unemployment rate, 19.2% bachelor's degree or higher attainment.

Commute context is included as well, with 11.7% of workers reporting commutes of 60 minutes or more.

CrimeScore pairs this county profile with neighborhood-level safety scores and block group map layers so teams can compare local areas inside Montgomery County without relying on one broad county-level view.

County profile data uses 2024 ACS 5-year estimates.

Population 26,007
Households 10,643
Block Groups 22
Bachelor's+ 19.2%
Owner occupied 75%
Renter occupied 25%
Poverty rate 16.3%
Unemployment 2.8%
60+ min commute 11.7%

How to read the map

Each colored polygon is a Census block group, typically 600 to 3,000 residents. Greener regions score safer; orange and red indicate higher modeled risk. Click any block group to see its score and grade. A free account unlocks component breakdowns and API access for production use.

About the model

Scores in Montgomery County come from the same gradient-boosted ensemble we ship through the CrimeScore crime data API, crime score API, and embeddable crime map. Built from normalized national location signals and validated across geography. Protected attributes are excluded from scoring, and prohibited/high-impact uses are explicitly out of scope.