Home Safety & Health USA Safety Guide 2026 — Cities, Scams & Smart Precautions
Safety & Health Updated April 2026

USA Safety Guide 2026 — Cities, Scams & Smart Precautions

The USA is generally very safe for tourists in tourist zones. Here is what you actually need to know — by city, by scenario, without the hype.

InfoUnitedStates.org · Independent guide · Not affiliated with any government

Is the USA Safe

Yes — for the places tourists actually go. American cities have vast inequality, so neighborhoods a few blocks apart can feel like different countries. The tourist zones (Manhattan below 125th St, Santa Monica, SF Union Square + Fisherman's Wharf, DC National Mall, Miami South Beach, Vegas Strip) are all heavily policed and very safe. Violent crime is concentrated in specific neighborhoods that have no reason to attract visitors.

Emergency Numbers

NumberPurpose
911Police, fire, medical — one number for all emergencies
988Mental health / suicide prevention
311City non-emergency info (major cities)
1-800-222-1222Poison Control
Your embassyLost passport, legal trouble, repatriation
📞 911 tips: Calls are free from any phone, even without service. The operator will ask your location first — say the city/state, then nearest cross streets. Stay on the line until help arrives or you are told to hang up.

By City

New York City: Very safe in Manhattan below 125th Street and most of Brooklyn/Queens. Subway is safer than its 1980s reputation. Avoid empty subway cars late at night.

Los Angeles: Tourist areas (Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, West Hollywood) are very safe. Skid Row (DTLA east of Main St) should be avoided. Car break-ins are LA's #1 crime — never leave valuables visible.

San Francisco: Tourist areas are safe. AVOID the Tenderloin (between Union Square and Civic Center) and Mid-Market/6th Street — open drug use and visible distress. SF also has America's highest car break-in rate.

Washington DC: National Mall, Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Dupont Circle and most of NW are very safe. SE Anacostia should be avoided at night.

Chicago: Downtown, North Side, Lincoln Park, Wicker Park are very safe. Chicago has a reputation problem — most crime is concentrated on the South and West sides, not where tourists go.

Miami: South Beach, Brickell and Wynwood are very safe. Avoid Liberty City and Overtown.

Las Vegas: The Strip and Fremont Street are extremely safe 24/7. Police on every block. Off-Strip areas are less safe but there is usually no reason to visit them.

New Orleans: French Quarter is safe but watch for pickpockets on Bourbon Street. Use rideshare after dark outside the Quarter. Avoid walking alone in Tremé at night.

Common Scams

  • "Free" CD/bracelet scams — Times Square, Hollywood Walk of Fame. Someone hands you something "free" then demands payment. Refuse firmly, keep walking.
  • Fake charity petitioners — common in Times Square, clipboard in hand. Professional scammers.
  • Cab meter scams (NYC, Vegas) — always use metered yellow cabs or Uber/Lyft.
  • Hotel Wi-Fi captive portal scams — check that Wi-Fi is the hotel's actual network before entering payment.
  • ATM skimmers — use bank ATMs inside branches when possible, avoid sketchy-looking standalone machines.
  • Restaurant "suggested gratuity" overcharge — some tourist traps add 18% auto-gratuity AND leave the tip line blank. Check the bill.

Car Safety

Car break-ins are America's single biggest theft crime against visitors. In SF, LA, Seattle and Portland, smashed rental car windows are extremely common. Rules:

  • Never leave ANYTHING visible — not even an empty bag
  • Trunk is not safe — thieves watch as you leave the car
  • Always park in garages when possible
  • Take everything with you, every time
  • Remove chargers, phone mounts, sunglasses — signals of hidden valuables

Gun Safety

Yes, guns are legal and common in the USA. No, they are not present in any tourist interaction. You will not see a gun unless you seek one out. Mass shootings are tragic and real but statistically extremely rare for tourists — you are far more likely to be injured in a car accident or from a slip and fall. That said:

  • Do not enter domestic disputes or street arguments
  • Avoid road rage confrontations — let aggressive drivers pass
  • If you hear gunshots, get behind solid cover (not just a tree)
  • Know the location of exits in crowded venues

Natural Disasters

HazardWhereWhen
HurricanesSoutheast coast, FloridaJune-November
TornadoesMidwest, Oklahoma, TexasApril-June
EarthquakesCaliforniaUnpredictable
WildfiresWest CoastJuly-October
BlizzardsNortheast, MidwestDecember-March
Flash floodsSouthwestJuly-September monsoon

What to Avoid

  • Leaving valuables in cars — #1 avoidable mistake
  • Wandering into unfamiliar neighborhoods at night — ask locals, not just Google
  • Counting cash in public
  • Carrying your passport around — leave it in the hotel safe, carry a photocopy
  • Walking under the influence in unfamiliar areas
  • Arguing with police — always comply, keep hands visible, dispute later
  • Joking about bombs, guns or drugs — especially in airports
  • Uninsured travel — one ER visit can cost more than your entire trip
🛡️ The single most important safety step: buy travel insurance. See our USA travel insurance guide.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Is the USA dangerous for tourists?

Not in tourist zones. Over 79 million international visitors came in 2023; the vast majority had no safety issues. Tourist areas in major cities are heavily policed.

Is gun violence common in tourist areas?

No. US gun violence is real but concentrated in specific neighborhoods that tourists almost never visit. Tourist zones in NYC, LA, SF, Miami, DC are very safe.

What is the #1 safety risk for US tourists?

Car break-ins. Never leave anything visible in a rental car, especially in SF, LA, Seattle and Portland.