Postcode sector · E17 0

Is Central Parade a good place to live?

41 postcodes · 41 postcodes

In Central Parade (E17 0), recorded crime is 1359% above the national average, and it ranks as close to the national average for deprivation (deprivation decile 4/10, where 1 is most deprived).

Official UK open data · crime to 2026-04 · HM Land Registry, Police.uk, Environment Agency, GIAS/Ofsted, ONS 2021. Free to browse.

Recorded crime trend

May 24: 18 crimesJul 24: 6 crimesAug 24: 168 crimesSep 24: 216 crimesOct 24: 229 crimesNov 24: 240 crimesDec 24: 181 crimesJan 25: 171 crimesFeb 25: 207 crimesMar 25: 210 crimesApr 25: 198 crimesMay 25: 177 crimesJun 25: 209 crimesJul 25: 214 crimesAug 25: 182 crimesSep 25: 186 crimesOct 25: 199 crimesNov 25: 210 crimesDec 25: 252 crimesJan 26: 206 crimesFeb 26: 180 crimesMar 26: 170 crimesApr 26: 160 crimes Apr 26: 160 crimes 252 6 May 24 Apr 26

Recorded crimes per month in E17 0 (May 24–Apr 26, average 182/month). Hover a point to read the count. Source: Police.uk street-level data.

Who lives here

Median age
36
One-person households
27%
Households with children
36%
Households
1,471

Owned 45% · Social rent 22% · Private rent 31%

Census 2021 (ONS), for E17 0.

Browse postcodes

Nearby areas

Central Parade E17 0: frequently asked questions

Is Central Parade E17 0 a good place to live?

In Central Parade (E17 0), recorded crime is 1359% above the national average, and it ranks as close to the national average for deprivation (deprivation decile 4/10, where 1 is most deprived).

What is the crime rate in Central Parade E17 0?

Recorded crime in Central Parade E17 0 runs at 3902.4 per 1,000 properties, 1359% above the national average (Police.uk, 2026-04).

Is Central Parade E17 0 safe?

Crime in Central Parade E17 0 is above the national average. Recorded crime in Central Parade E17 0 runs at 3902.4 per 1,000 properties, 1359% above the national average (Police.uk, 2026-04).

Is Central Parade E17 0 a deprived area?

Central Parade E17 0 sits in deprivation decile 4 of 10 (1 = most deprived), making it around the national average for England (English Indices of Deprivation, ONS).