Seattle has recorded 1,579 motor vehicle thefts in 2026 alone, and the year has not yet reached its halfway point. That translates to roughly 12 cars stolen every single day, putting the city on pace for thousands more stolen vehicles before December.
The figures come from the Seattle Police Department’s Crime Dashboard and reflect a property crime landscape that remains stubbornly persistent despite broader reductions in violent crime across the city. Car theft sits within a wider picture of property crime that has produced 11,242 incidents in Seattle so far this year, including 6,988 larceny-theft cases and 2,621 burglaries.
SPD data shows that crime spiked early in the year before dipping in February, then climbed again as winter gave way to spring, a pattern that raises questions about what the warmer months ahead may bring. Historically, property crime in Seattle tends to increase during summer, driven by a combination of higher foot traffic, more vehicles left unattended in public spaces, and the general increase in outdoor activity that comes with the season.
The sustained pace of vehicle theft is a concern that extends beyond individual victims. Each stolen car represents a police report, a potential insurance claim, and in many cases weeks of disruption for the owner. For a city actively preparing to host hundreds of thousands of FIFA World Cup visitors this summer, the trajectory of property crime will be closely watched by city officials, businesses, and residents alike.



