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The five safest neighborhoods in the Las Vegas valley in 2026, ranked by violent crime rate and overall safety data: 1) Henderson (Anthem/Seven Hills, ~2.1 violent crimes per 1,000), 2) Summerlin (The Ridges/89135, ~2–3 per 1,000), 3) Green Valley (89052, Henderson PD coverage, guard-gated sections), 4) Centennial Hills / Skye Canyon (89166, CrimeGrade B+, ~2.9 per 1,000), and 5) Aliante / Northwest North Las Vegas (89084/89085, A+ crime scores, 50–60% below NLV citywide average). All five areas significantly outperform the Las Vegas citywide violent crime rate of ~9.5 per 1,000 residents.

Safest Neighborhoods in Las Vegas: 2026 Rankings by Crime Data

People moving to Las Vegas ask the same question more than any other: where are the safest neighborhoods in Las Vegas? The valley covers over 600 square miles across four separate municipalities and unincorporated Clark County, and the safety gap between neighborhoods is enormous. A zip code on one side of a freeway can have four times the violent crime rate of the zip code on the other side.

This ranking uses real data (not vibes) to answer the question.

How We Ranked the Safest Neighborhoods in Las Vegas

Every neighborhood on this list was evaluated across five criteria:

  • Violent crime rate per 1,000 residents: the single most important metric, sourced from FBI UCR data, Henderson PD, LVMPD, and North Las Vegas PD reports for 2024
  • Property crime rates: burglary, auto theft, and larceny per capita using CrimeGrade and NeighborhoodScout aggregators
  • Police department structure: whether the area is served by a dedicated municipal force (Henderson PD, NLV PD) or falls under LVMPD's area command system
  • Gated vs. non-gated prevalence: guard-gated communities with 24/7 staffed entry demonstrably reduce crime in every dataset we reviewed
  • Local consensus: what residents actually report about their experience living there, cross-referenced against published crime maps

No neighborhood is perfectly safe. Every area on this list still experiences property crime. What separates these five from the rest of the valley is the consistency of their safety across multiple metrics and years.


#1 Henderson (Anthem / Seven Hills)

Henderson is the safest large city in Nevada and consistently ranks among the safest in the entire United States. The numbers are not close.

The data: Henderson's violent crime rate sits at approximately 2.1 per 1,000 residents, roughly 18% below the national average of 4.0 per 1,000. In 2024, the city of 330,000 people recorded just 8 homicides. Property crime runs near the national average citywide, but the southern master-planned communities crush those averages.

Why Henderson leads the list: The city operates its own police department (the Henderson Police Department), entirely separate from LVMPD. This is a structural advantage that matters daily. HPD has roughly 519 sworn officers serving a single, focused jurisdiction. Response times are faster, dispatch is simpler, and the department answers to Henderson's city council rather than the sprawling Clark County bureaucracy.

The best sub-neighborhoods: Anthem and Seven Hills in zip code 89052 have a violent crime rate of approximately 10.5 per 100,000; compare that to the national figure of 380 per 100,000. Crime in these guard-gated communities runs 40–50% below Henderson's already-low citywide average. Inspirada (89044) tracks similarly. MacDonald Ranch (89012) adds another layer of elevation-gated safety in the hills above Green Valley.

The honest caveat: Henderson is not uniformly safe. The Boulder Highway corridor between Lake Mead Parkway and Sunset Road carries crime numbers that would drag any city's averages down. But if you're buying or renting in southern Henderson, you're in one of the safest residential areas in the western United States.

Read our full breakdown: Is Henderson Safe? Crime Rates & What Locals Actually Say


#2 Summerlin (The Ridges / 89135)

Summerlin is the largest master-planned community in the Las Vegas valley and one of the safest places to live in Southern Nevada. Violent crime rates run roughly 60% below the Las Vegas citywide average.

The data: Summerlin's safest zip codes (89135, 89138, 89144) consistently appear on every "lowest crime zip codes in Las Vegas" list. Zip code 89135 (Summerlin South) has a violent crime rate of approximately 20.7 per 100,000, which edges out the national average of 22.7. The broader Summerlin area runs at roughly 2–3 violent crimes per 1,000 residents depending on which zip you're measuring.

Police coverage: Summerlin received its own dedicated LVMPD Area Command substation in 2020 at 11301 Redpoint Drive, giving the community denser officer concentration than it had under the old Northwest Area Command. LVMPD weekly statistical reports consistently show Summerlin Area Command among the department's lowest-crime zones.

Guard-gated advantage: The Ridges, Red Rock Country Club, and The Summit Club operate 24/7 staffed entry gates with license plate recognition and roving private security. Reported crime in these communities is extremely rare. Even outside the gates, standard HOA villages in Summerlin see property crime rates well below the valley average.

The honest caveat: The Sahara-Durango transition zone on Summerlin's eastern edge is technically in a "Summerlin area" zip code but carries a different crime profile: more commercial density, more foot traffic, more incidents. If a listing advertises a Summerlin address east of Rainbow on Sahara, verify you're inside the actual master-planned community.

Read our full breakdown: Is Summerlin Safe? Crime Rates & What Locals Say


#3 Green Valley (89052)

Green Valley sits in the heart of Henderson and benefits from the same Henderson PD coverage that makes the city the safest in the valley. It earns a separate ranking because of its distinct character and price point: this is where many families land when Henderson's southern gated communities exceed their budget.

The data: Zip code 89052 is the lowest-crime zip in the Green Valley cluster, overlapping with parts of Anthem and Seven Hills. The broader Green Valley area (zip codes 89014 and 89074) tracks below Henderson's citywide averages for both violent and property crime. Green Valley Ranch, the master-planned community along the 215 corridor, benefits from newer construction and active HOA management.

Seven Hills guard-gated: The Seven Hills community within Green Valley operates guard-gated entry, and crime data there is consistently among the lowest in the entire valley. If you want Henderson PD coverage and guard-gated security without Anthem pricing, Seven Hills is the answer.

Community structure: Green Valley is a mature, established community, with trees, shade, finished parks, completed retail, and a sense of permanence that newer developments haven't yet achieved. The trade-off is that some neighborhoods date to the late 1980s and early 1990s, so the housing stock is older.

Why #3 and not higher: Green Valley is mostly non-gated, which means property crime (particularly car break-ins and package theft) is more common than in Anthem or Summerlin's gated sections. The violent crime rate is excellent. The property crime rate is good but not quite as tight as the top two.

Read our full breakdown: Is Green Valley Safe? Crime Rates & Safest Streets


#4 Centennial Hills / Skye Canyon (89166)

Centennial Hills and its northern extension, Skye Canyon, represent the fastest-growing safe corridor in the Las Vegas valley. The area earns a CrimeGrade rating of B+ and violent crime runs at approximately 2.9 per 1,000 residents.

The data: Zip code 89166 ranks among the valley's safest; property crime and violent crime both track well below Las Vegas citywide averages. The area benefits from newer construction (most homes built after 2005, with Skye Canyon still actively developing), higher owner-occupancy rates, and distance from the Strip and downtown corridors that generate spillover crime elsewhere.

Police coverage: LVMPD's Northwest Area Command currently covers Centennial Hills and Skye Canyon. A new LVMPD substation is planned for the 89166 corridor with an anticipated opening around 2027, which will tighten response times further. Community policing engagement in the area is active; the Centennial Hills LVMPD community liaison posts regular updates and hosts neighborhood safety meetings.

Growth and trajectory: Centennial Hills is still building out. Skye Canyon in particular is adding thousands of new homes through 2028. The advantage of this growth: modern street design, LED lighting, wide sight lines, and HOA-enforced maintenance standards. The disadvantage: retail and commercial infrastructure is still catching up, and higher commercial density historically correlates with modest property crime increases.

Why #4 and not higher: The violent crime rate of ~2.9 per 1,000 is excellent by national standards but measurably higher than Henderson or Summerlin South. And LVMPD coverage, while adequate, does not match the dedicated-department advantage that Henderson PD provides.

Read our full breakdown: Is Centennial Hills Safe? Crime Rates & What Locals Say


#5 Aliante / Northwest North Las Vegas (89084 / 89085)

Aliante is the neighborhood that challenges every assumption people have about North Las Vegas. While the city as a whole carries a rough reputation, the Aliante corridor in the northwest is a completely different story.

The data: Zip codes 89084 and 89085 earn A+ crime scores from CrimeGrade, with violent and property crime running 50–60% below North Las Vegas citywide averages. These zip codes consistently rank alongside Summerlin and Henderson zip codes on safety aggregator lists, which surprises most people who hear "North Las Vegas" and stop listening.

The NLV split: North Las Vegas has a sharp geographic divide. The older southern and central neighborhoods (along Lake Mead Boulevard, Carey Avenue, and the area around Craig Road and Las Vegas Boulevard) carry genuinely elevated crime numbers. Aliante and the northwest corridor are geographically separated from these areas and share almost nothing in common with them except the city name and police department.

Community design: Aliante is a master-planned community built around the Aliante Nature Discovery Park and Aliante Golf Club. The homes are largely 2000s-era construction, HOA-managed, and family-oriented. The community has its own retail center (Aliante Station area) that keeps traffic localized rather than drawing from outside.

Why #5: North Las Vegas PD covers the area, and while NLV PD has improved meaningfully in recent years, it is a department stretched across a city with significant crime challenges in other zones. The Aliante corridor itself is safe, but the municipal context matters. Residents occasionally report slower police response times compared to Henderson PD or even LVMPD's Summerlin command.

Read our full breakdown: Is North Las Vegas Safe? Crime Rates & What Locals Say


Honorable Mention: Spring Valley Southwest (89148 / 89113)

Spring Valley is the most internally inconsistent neighborhood in the Las Vegas valley for safety. The southwestern zip codes (89148 and 89113) post solid safety numbers, particularly in the newer subdivisions near the 215 beltway. Violent crime in these areas runs below the LVMPD area average, and property crime stays manageable.

But Spring Valley as a whole cannot make a top-five list because zip code 89103 (the northeastern section near the Strip and the Chinatown corridor) is one of LVMPD's highest-crime zones. The gap between Spring Valley's best and worst neighborhoods is wider than the gap between any other community on this list.

If you're considering Spring Valley, location within the neighborhood matters enormously. The southwest corner near the mountains is genuinely safe. The northeast corner near the Strip is not.

Read our full breakdown: Is Spring Valley Safe? Crime Rates & What Locals Say


Comparison Table: Las Vegas Valley Safest Neighborhoods

#1Henderson (Anthem / Seven Hills)
Excellent
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~2.1
Property Crime
A
Police Dept.
Henderson PD
#2Summerlin (The Ridges / 89135)
Excellent
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~2–3
Property Crime
A-
Police Dept.
LVMPD Summerlin
#3Green Valley (89052)
Very Good
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~2.1
Property Crime
B+
Police Dept.
Henderson PD
#4Centennial Hills / Skye Canyon (89166)
Very Good
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~2.9
Property Crime
B+
Police Dept.
LVMPD Northwest
#5Aliante / NW NLV (89084 / 89085)
Very Good
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~2.5
Property Crime
A
Police Dept.
NLV PD
#6Spring Valley SW (89148 / 89113)
Good
Violent Crime (per 1,000)
~3.5
Property Crime
B
Police Dept.
LVMPD Spring Valley

What Actually Makes a Las Vegas Neighborhood Safe

After reviewing crime data across every major neighborhood in the valley, five factors consistently separate the safest neighborhoods in Las Vegas from the rest:

HOA and gated communities. Guard-gated neighborhoods with 24/7 staffed entry have measurably lower crime rates everywhere we looked. The barrier to entry deters opportunistic property crime, which is the dominant crime type in safe neighborhoods.

Police department structure. Henderson PD's dedicated municipal model delivers faster response times and tighter community policing than LVMPD's area command system. This is not a criticism of LVMPD; it is a structural reality of covering a jurisdiction that spans the entire unincorporated county.

Distance from the Strip. Crime radiates outward from the Las Vegas Strip and downtown Fremont Street. Every neighborhood on this list sits at least 10 miles from the Strip, and that distance is not coincidental.

Owner-occupancy rates. Neighborhoods with higher percentages of owner-occupied homes consistently post lower crime rates than areas dominated by short-term rentals and transient tenants. Homeowners invest in security, report suspicious activity, and participate in neighborhood watch programs.

Newer construction. Modern subdivisions are designed with crime prevention in mind: better lighting, fewer blind spots, wider streets, and controlled-access entry points. Every neighborhood on this list was built or significantly expanded after 2000.


FAQ

What is the safest city in Nevada?

Henderson is the safest large city in Nevada by every available metric. With a violent crime rate of approximately 2.1 per 1,000 residents (roughly 18% below the national average) and its own dedicated police department, Henderson consistently ranks among the 10 safest large cities in the United States. The southern master-planned communities of Anthem, Seven Hills, and Inspirada push those numbers even lower. Boulder City (population ~16,000) has even lower raw crime numbers, but it is a small town rather than a comparably-sized city.

Is Henderson safer than Las Vegas?

Yes, and it is not close. Henderson's violent crime rate is approximately 2.1 per 1,000 residents. The city of Las Vegas runs at roughly 9.5 per 1,000, more than four times higher. Property crime follows a similar pattern. Henderson also benefits from its own municipal police department (Henderson PD), which provides faster response times and more focused community policing than LVMPD's sprawling multi-area-command structure. Read our full Henderson safety guide for the detailed breakdown.

What are the safest zip codes in the Las Vegas valley?

The consistently safest zip codes across all major crime aggregators are: 89052 (Anthem/Seven Hills in Henderson), 89135 (Summerlin South), 89044 (Inspirada in Henderson), 89138 (Summerlin West), 89166 (Centennial Hills/Skye Canyon), and 89084 (Aliante in North Las Vegas). These zip codes all post violent crime rates well below the national average and earn A or A+ property crime grades. The safest single residential zip code in the valley is 89052, which covers Anthem and parts of Seven Hills.

Is it safe to live near the Strip?

Generally, no. Not by the standards of the neighborhoods on this list. Crime radiates outward from the Las Vegas Strip and Fremont Street corridor. The areas immediately adjacent to the Strip (zip codes 89109, 89169, and parts of 89102) have violent crime rates multiple times higher than the valley average. Tourist density, transient populations, nightlife spillover, and homelessness concentrate around the resort corridor. Locals who prioritize safety live 10+ miles from the Strip in the suburban communities that make up this ranking. If you work on the Strip, the commute from Henderson or Summerlin is 20–30 minutes, a reasonable trade for significantly better safety.

Are gated communities worth it for safety in Las Vegas?

The data says yes. Guard-gated communities with 24/7 staffed entry (like The Ridges in Summerlin, Anthem Country Club in Henderson, or Seven Hills in Green Valley) have measurably lower crime rates than comparable non-gated neighborhoods. The difference is most significant for property crime: car break-ins, package theft, and garage burglary are the dominant crimes in safe Las Vegas neighborhoods, and controlled access directly addresses all three. The trade-off is cost (HOA fees in guard-gated communities run $200–$500+/month) and occasional delays for emergency response through the gate. For families and homeowners who prioritize security, the premium is justified by the data.

What neighborhoods in Las Vegas should I avoid?

The areas with the highest crime rates in the Las Vegas valley include: the East Fremont / Downtown corridor (89101, 89104), the Naked City / Strip-adjacent area (89109), North Las Vegas south of Craig Road (89030, 89032), the Boulder Highway corridor through Henderson's older section, and Spring Valley's northeast corner near the Strip (89103). These areas have violent crime rates 3–5 times the valley average. The contrast with the neighborhoods on this safety ranking is stark, which is why location within the Las Vegas valley matters more than almost any other factor when choosing where to live.

Published 2026-03-12 · Updated 2026-03-12