UK crime hotspots: Interactive map shows areas most badly affected by violent crime as Tories order increased ‘hotspot patrols’

The Tories will bring in ‘hotspot patrolling’ of the UK’s top crime neighbourhoods in a bid to target policing where it is most needed. 

The party has identified 2,000 crime ‘hotspots’ across the UK where crimes such as theft, possession of weapons and anti-social behaviour are most likely to occur.

These locations represent 5 per cent of the country but 25 per cent of violent crime. 

According to the data, four of the top five hotspots for crime lie in Westminster, with areas in Leeds, Birmingham and Cardiff also badly affected. 

Of the crimes committed, violent and sexual offences were the most prevalent, followed by anti-social behaviour and shoplifting. 

Under the Tories’ plans, dedicated officers would be deployed in pairs for the 40 highest-risk hours of each week in each crime hotspot, and would patrol every week of the year. 

This would eventually see 5,500 officers delivering 8.3 million patrol hours annually, with the Tories forecasting that 35,000 crimes would be prevented. 

Commenting on his party’s plans, shadow home secretary Chris Philp said that sustained patrols in high-risk areas ‘interrupt repeat offending, deter opportunistic crime, and rebuild confidence for residents who too often feel forgotten’. 

He added that forces that have taken this approach have seen ‘real reductions in violence and antisocial behaviour’.

‘The next Conservative government will make this common-sense approach standard practice. 

‘Officers on the ground, week in week out, in the places that need them most, supported by technology designed to catch criminals. This is practical, evidence-led policing to deliver safer streets,’ he said.

Despite concerns about civil liberties, the party would also require every police force to deploy live facial recognition technology routinely in high-crime areas. 

Such tech has already helped police make more than 1,000 arrests across England and Wales between January 2024 and July 2025, and led to a 70 per cent reduction in robbery at this year’s Notting Hill Carnival. 

The party plans to recruit 10,000 new police officers as part of a crackdown on violent and sexual crime, and would launch a grooming gangs inquiry with the power to hold officials to account. 

Tripling stop and search to remove knives and weapons from UK streets is also a priority for the party.

Philp has previously said that a ‘serious overhaul of how we tackle the scourge of violence and knife crime’ was ‘long overdue’ in the wake of a mass stabbing on an LNER service from Doncaster to London in November.

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp has said that the Tories' plans for 'practical, evidence-led policing' will 'deliver safer streets'

Shadow home secretary Chris Philp has said that the Tories’ plans for ‘practical, evidence-led policing’ will ‘deliver safer streets’

Under the Tories' plans, dedicated officers would be deployed in pairs for the 40 highest-risk hours of each week, and would patrol every week of the year

Under the Tories’ plans, dedicated officers would be deployed in pairs for the 40 highest-risk hours of each week, and would patrol every week of the year

The Tories also plan to scrap non-crime hate incidents, freeing police officers to work on more serious crimes, and saving 60,000 hours of police time. 

The party would give the Home Secretary the power to set binding operational priorities across all police forces. 

The Home Office’s ‘Grip’ programme has previously used hotspot policing to counter crime in certain areas. 

In the year ending March 2023, at least 90,000 patrols were carried out and more than 85,000 weapons were collected. 

There was a 7 per cent reduction in violence and robbery offences in the hotspots patrolled in the year ending March 2022. 

The Tories would back their own measures with £800 million annually.

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