Is Lisbon safe?
Short answer: Lisbon is broadly safe for visitors. It records about 49.9 offences per 1,000 residents in calendar year 2025 (provisional), which is one of the higher rates among Portugal's 278 municipalities - typical of a big city. Most of that is theft rather than violent crime (violence runs at about 5.4 per 1,000).
Those rates are counted per resident, so a busy city centre looks worse on paper than it feels: it has few residents but huge daytime and tourist footfall, which pushes the per-resident rate up. Read the numbers as a guide, compare within Portugal only, and remember that recorded crime is not the same as how safe a place feels.
Common questions about safety in Lisbon
Is it safe to travel to Lisbon right now?
For most visitors, yes. Lisbon draws large numbers of tourists with comparatively low violent crime (about 5.4 violent offences per 1,000 residents). The main thing to watch is pickpocketing and bag-snatching around sights and transport. Safetlas uses officially recorded annual crime data, not live travel advisories, so for strikes, protests or events on a given day, also check your government's travel advice.
Which areas of Lisbon should I avoid?
No part of Lisbon is a no-go zone. As in most cities, recorded crime concentrates in the busy centre, main stations and nightlife areas - largely theft and pickpocketing - while residential districts are quieter. Use the map to see the pattern before you pick a hotel.
Is Lisbon safe for solo female travellers?
Lisbon is a common and generally safe destination for solo female travellers, with the usual big-city precautions. Most theft and harassment affecting visitors happens on public transport and around crowded sights, so keep bags closed and in front of you and prefer well-lit, busy streets at night. Safetlas was built after a bad solo-travel experience - this is exactly what the map is for.
Is Lisbon safe at night?
Central and busy areas stay lively and generally safe well into the night, especially the main streets and nightlife districts. Quieter spots around some stations feel less comfortable after dark. Recorded crime is driven more by daytime theft than night-time violence, but the usual caution - busier streets, licensed taxis or ride apps - applies.
See Lisbon on the interactive map →