The 2026 Crime Index Figures That Should Change How You Travel
There is a myth. It has been around for decades, passed down through cautious relatives, outdated travel guides, and the kind of well-meaning advice that begins with “are you sure that’s a good idea?”.
The myth goes something like this: Eastern Europe is dangerous. Stick to Western Europe if you want to be safe. Paris, London, Rome – those are the sensible choices.
Well. The 2026 Numbeo Crime Index for Europe has just published its latest figures, and if you’ve been operating on that assumption, it’s time for a rethink. A fairly significant one.
What the Numbers Actually Say

Numbeo’s Crime Index is one of the most widely referenced crowd-sourced databases of perceived crime and safety worldwide. A higher score means more crime. A lower score means safer streets. The 2026 European rankings make for genuinely eye-opening reading.
Before we dive in, one important note: Numbeo’s index is based on crowd-sourced perception data. that is, how safe residents and visitors feel in a given country, rather than official police statistics or recorded crime figures. Perception and reality don’t always align perfectly, and no single dataset tells the complete story. That said, perception data is arguably what matters most to a traveller deciding where to go, and the scale and consistency of Numbeo’s dataset, drawn from hundreds of thousands of contributors worldwide, makes it one of the most meaningful barometers of real-world travel safety available. The trends it reveals are striking, and they are consistent with what we and our guests experience on the ground year after year.
Here are the ten countries with the highest crime scores in Europe – in other words, the ones perceived as least safe:
| Rank | Country | Crime Index |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | France | 55.8 |
| 2 | Belgium | 49.2 |
| 3 | Ireland | 49.0 |
| 4 | Belarus | 48.5 |
| 5 | United Kingdom | 48.3 |
| 6 | Sweden | 47.9 |
| 7 | Italy | 47.3 |
| 8 | Ukraine | 46.9 |
| 9 | Greece | 46.2 |
| 10 | Moldova | 44.6 |
France – France! Tops the list as the country with the highest perceived crime rate in Europe. The United Kingdom comes in fifth. Sweden sixth. Italy seventh.
Now here are the ten safest countries in Europe according to the same data:
| Rank | Country | Crime Index |
|---|---|---|
| 34 | Estonia | 23.2 |
| 33 | Isle of Man | 20.9 |
| 32 | Andorra | 15.2 |
| 35 | Croatia | 24.3 |
| 36 | Slovenia | 24.5 |
| 37 | Netherlands | 25.5 |
| 38 | Iceland | 25.5 |
| 39 | Denmark | 26.2 |
| 40 | Czech Republic | 26.4 |
| 41 | Finland | 26.5 |
Estonia is safer than France by a margin of more than 30 points. Croatia and Slovenia, two of our favourite destinations, sit comfortably among the safest countries on the continent. Poland (28.7) and Romania (32.8) are both safer than Germany (38.4), Spain (37.6) and significantly safer than the UK (48.3).
Let that sink in for a moment.
The Eastern European Story Nobody Tells

Look at where the countries that are so often whispered about nervously actually sit in these rankings:
- Romania: 32.8 — safer than Germany, Spain and Italy
- Poland: 28.7 — safer than Germany, safer than Spain, safer than France by nearly 27 points
- Czech Republic: 26.4 — one of the safest countries in Europe, full stop
- Slovakia: 31.1 — safer than Germany
- Bulgaria: 35.5 — safer than France, Belgium, the UK, Sweden and Italy
- Serbia: 37.0 — safer than France, Belgium, the UK and Sweden
- Croatia: 24.3 — among the safest countries on the entire continent
- Slovenia: 24.5 — ditto
- Hungary: 33.5 — safer than France by over 22 points
- Estonia: 23.2 — one of the very safest countries in Europe
The pattern here is not subtle. Country after country in Eastern and Central Europe scores considerably better than the Western European nations that are routinely marketed as safe, sophisticated, must-visit destinations.
Meanwhile, France, the world’s most visited country, the dream destination of countless travellers, the one nobody ever questions, sits at the very top of the European crime index. Not because Paris is some kind of war zone, of course it isn’t, but because perceived safety and received wisdom are two very different things, and the data is telling us quite clearly that our assumptions need updating.
Why Does the Myth Persist?

It’s a fair question. If the numbers are this clear, why do so many people still hesitate about travelling east?
Part of it is legacy. The Cold War cast a long shadow, and for decades the countries behind the Iron Curtain were genuinely closed, mysterious, and associated in the Western imagination with grey austerity and suspicion. Those perceptions were baked into a generation of attitudes, and they have been slow to shift even as the reality on the ground changed beyond recognition.
Part of it is media representation. Crime stories from Western capitals get far more coverage in British and Irish newspapers than equivalent stories from Bucharest or Tallinn, which creates a skewed impression that one set of places is inherently more dangerous than another.
And part of it, frankly, is familiarity bias. We fear what we don’t know. Paris feels safe because we know what to expect. Warsaw feels riskier not because it is, but because it’s less familiar. The data tells us this is an illusion.
What This Means for Travellers

It means that the reasons to explore Eastern Europe, the extraordinary history, the wild landscapes, the intact old towns, the extraordinary food, the value for money, the warmth of the welcome, the sheer lack of tourist crowds, are not counterbalanced by any meaningful safety concern.
Romania’s Danube Delta is one of Europe’s last great wildernesses, and it is safer to visit than France. Albania’s Accursed Mountains, name notwithstanding, are safer than the UK, safer than Belgium, safer than Ireland. The cobbled medieval streets of Tallinn and Ljubljana are among the safest urban environments on the continent.
This is not to say that common sense doesn’t apply everywhere you travel, it always does. Be aware of your surroundings, look after your belongings, follow local advice. That’s true in Prague and it’s true in Paris. But the idea that Eastern Europe requires a different or heightened level of caution compared to Western Europe is simply not supported by the evidence.
The Destinations Waiting for You

At Untravelled Paths, Eastern Europe and the Balkans have always been close to our hearts precisely because they offer something the well-worn Western routes can’t: genuine discovery. Places where you can still feel like you’ve found something, rather than joined a queue to see it.
The Danube Delta in Romania, where Lipovan Russians and Ukrainians have lived side by side in harmony for centuries, accessible only by boat, surrounded by extraordinary wildlife. The Accursed Mountains of Albania, where the only road between two villages is a hiking trail over a 1,800-metre mountain pass. The wooden villages of the Transylvanian countryside. The ancient walled city of Dubrovnik’s less-visited Croatian hinterland. The wild karst landscapes of Slovenia.
All of them, according to the 2026 Numbeo Crime Index, safer than France. Safer than the UK. Safer than Sweden.
Ready to See Eastern Europe for Yourself?

If you’ve been putting off a trip to Romania, Albania, the Balkans, or the Baltic states because of a vague, unexamined concern about safety – we hope this post has given you the push you needed.
The numbers are clear. The welcome is warm. The paths are, delightfully, untravelled.
Get in touch with the Untravelled Paths team today and let us help you plan a trip to one of Europe’s most rewarding and most unfairly overlooked corners. We know these places personally and deeply, and we can’t wait to share them with you.
Data source: Numbeo Crime Index by Country 2026 – Europe. View the full dataset here.
Written by James Chisnall
The post Eastern Europe Is Safer Than You Think appeared first on Untravelled Paths.
from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/eastern-europe-safe-travel-crime-index-2026/





































