NYPD Delivers Record Crime Lows in Early 2026 — Subways Buck the Downward Trend

By Matthias Binder
NYPD under Tisch STILL bringing crime down — except when Mamdani stops it (Featured Image)

Violent Crime Plummets to Unprecedented Levels (Image Credits: Nypost.com)

New York City – Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch announced dramatic crime reductions across the five boroughs for January and February 2026, achieving historic lows in shootings and murders while subway offenses rose amid severe winter weather.[1][2]

Violent Crime Plummets to Unprecedented Levels

The NYPD recorded 83 shooting incidents and 97 shooting victims over the two-month period, the fewest in departmental history.[2] These figures surpassed previous records set in 2019 and 2025. Murders totaled 32, falling below the prior low of 38 from 2018.[3]

February alone saw murders drop 33.3 percent from the previous year, with 16 cases compared to 24.[2] Overall major crime declined 8 percent citywide in the month, equating to 7,596 incidents versus 8,250 a year earlier. Year-to-date, the city logged 1,100 fewer reported crimes.[3]

Targeted Strategies Drive Citywide Gains

Commissioner Tisch credited “targeted, data-driven policing” for the results, noting reductions in every borough.[2] Public housing developments experienced a 14.7 percent crime drop in February, alongside a 45.5 percent plunge in shootings there. Retail theft fell 24.7 percent over the same period.[1]

The Winter Violence Reduction Plan deployed 1,800 additional officers to high-risk zones since January, yielding a 23.1 percent major crime decrease and 66.7 percent drop in shootings in those areas. Similarly, the School Safety Plan reduced youth-related crimes by 56.7 percent since September 2025.[3]

Crime Category Jan-Feb 2026 Prior Record Change
Shootings 83 92 (2025) New low
Shooting Victims 97 105 (2025) New low
Murders 32 38 (2018) New low

Subway Crime Spikes Despite Broader Declines

Transit offenses climbed nearly 20 percent in February, reaching more than 190 incidents from 162 the year before.[1] Felony assaults and grand larcenies drove the increase, linked to colder weather funneling more riders underground. Ejections from trains and stations dropped 61 percent from January levels after city directives limited removals of homeless individuals and others during extreme cold and snow.[2]

Officers responded by adding 140 personnel daily to the system. Still, specific upticks included a 450 percent rise in unattended item thefts and 41.7 percent more felony assaults on officers.[3] The NYPD viewed these as temporary, tied to weather patterns rather than a reversal of overall progress.

Other Categories Show Mixed Results

  • Burglaries decreased 19.8 percent in February (784 vs. 977).
  • Robberies fell 33 percent year-to-date in public housing.
  • Grand larceny dropped 6.8 percent, felony assaults 6.1 percent, and auto theft 5.8 percent.
  • Hate crimes totaled 38 in February, with 21 targeting Jewish victims.[3]

These figures built on 2025’s record safety, when shootings fell 24 percent and murders over 20 percent citywide. Commissioner Tisch emphasized sustained focus on streets, housing, and transit to maintain momentum.[2]

Key Takeaways:

  • NYPD set new benchmarks for shootings, victims, and murders in early 2026.
  • Precision policing and targeted deployments fueled borough-wide drops.
  • Subway uptick highlighted weather and policy impacts on transit safety.

These early 2026 statistics underscored the effectiveness of data-driven strategies amid challenging conditions, though transit vulnerabilities signaled areas for adjustment. As spring approaches, sustained enforcement could cement the city’s safest year yet. What do you think about these trends? Tell us in the comments.

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