Safest Cities in Wisconsin

Cities ranked by Community Safety Score — a composite of health outcomes, economic stability, and healthcare access from CDC and Census data. 50 cities ranked from official U.S. government data.

What this Wisconsin ranking shows

According to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates, the CDC PLACES population-level health analysis, and the CMS Hospital Compare quality data, Areazine ranks U.S. cities across more than 19,000 incorporated places, census-designated places, and consolidated city-county governments. State-level city rankings combine these federal datasets to produce intra-state comparisons across demographics, economics, health outcomes, and hospital quality.

Mequon leads 50 Wisconsin cities at 76.0, while Onalaska sits at the bottom with 69.0 — a total spread of 7.0 on safety score. The top 5 occupy 11% of that range, indicating a tightly-clustered top tier — the leading cities are nearly indistinguishable on this metric.

The median Wisconsin city in this list sits at 72.1, 3.9 behind Mequon. See our methodology for ranking construction, data vintage, refresh cadence, and the federal upstream tables we join, and triangulate via the 8 other Wisconsin rankings below — cities that lead on multiple lenses are the most robust signals.

Top 5 — Safest Cities

Top 5 Wisconsin cities ranked by safety score
Rank City safety score Population
#1 Mequon 76.0 23K
#2 Port Washington 76.0 12K
#3 Grafton 76.0 12K
#4 Cedarburg 76.0 11K
#5 Waukesha 75.2 72K

Safest Cities 50

More Wisconsin Rankings 8

Reading this Wisconsin ranking responsibly

Single-metric rankings are useful precisely because they are honest about what they measure. A "highest income" ranking does not tell you that the top-ranked city is the best place to live in Wisconsin; it tells you that, among cities of population ten thousand and above in Wisconsin that have a published median household income field in the most recent American Community Survey five-year estimates, this city has the highest such value. That precise definition matters, because composite "best places" lists from real-estate marketing sites and lifestyle magazines often combine income with subjective weights on schools, walkability, and amenities, producing a score whose components are not disclosed and whose ordering is not reproducible. Areazine's editorial commitment is to keep the underlying field, source, and vintage visible so the reader can audit any rank in this list against the canonical federal record.

Cross-checking against other rankings is a useful sanity test. A city that appears in the top ten on three or more different rankings — for example, highest income, most educated, and lowest poverty — is showing a robust signal across multiple independent dimensions. A city that appears in the top ten on only one ranking and middling on the others is showing a narrower signal, often driven by a single statistical artifact (a small population pulling the per-capita measure, a recent acquisition spike inflating median home value, an outlier survey year). The other nine Wisconsin rankings linked above provide that cross-check at zero extra effort.

Data Sources

Population and economic data from the Census Bureau American Community Survey (2022 5-year estimates). Health data from the CDC PLACES (2023). Ranking computations use U.S. Census Bureau reference geographies. Crime statistics, where referenced, originate from the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program (also accessible via the Crime Data Explorer).