
South Africa’s tourism sector risks a sharp decline in 2026 after record 2025 arrivals (Over 10+ million visitors, boosted by G20 events). Numbeo’s January 2026 Crime Index ranks five SA cities in the global top 16—Pietermaritzburg (1), Pretoria (2), Johannesburg (5), Durban (6), Port Elizabeth (8)—all scoring higher than Caracas (3). Lagos Nigeria and Windhoek Namibia are the only two African cities ranked in the top 30.
This perception-based data (ongoing surveys, weighted toward recent contributions) amplifies ongoing travel advisories for travel to South Africa: Canada and Australia advise “high degree of caution,” the US “reconsider travel” in parts due to violent crime, and the UK warns against certain areas.
Numbeo’s Crime Index ranks cities worldwide based on user-submitted perceptions of crime levels (higher index = higher perceived crime/danger). The data updates continuously from surveys.
As of January 2026, here are the top 30 most dangerous cities (Highest Crime Index):
| Rank | City | Country | Crime Index | Safety Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pietermaritzburg | South Africa | 82.8 | 17.2 |
| 2 | Pretoria | South Africa | 81.8 | 18.2 |
| 3 | Caracas | Venezuela | 81.4 | 18.6 |
| 4 | Port Moresby | Papua New Guinea | 81.3 | 18.7 |
| 5 | Johannesburg | South Africa | 80.8 | 19.2 |
| 6 | Durban | South Africa | 80.4 | 19.6 |
| 7 | San Pedro Sula | Honduras | 79.4 | 20.6 |
| 8 | Port Elizabeth | South Africa | 78.6 | 21.4 |
| 9 | Memphis, TN | United States | 78.5 | 21.5 |
| 10 | Salvador | Brazil | 76.5 | 23.5 |
| 11 | Port of Spain | Trinidad And Tobago | 76.4 | 23.6 |
| 12 | Fortaleza | Brazil | 75.9 | 24.1 |
| 13 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | 75.2 | 24.8 |
| 14 | Recife | Brazil | 74.9 | 25.1 |
| 15 | Guayaquil | Ecuador | 74.4 | 25.6 |
| 16 | Cape Town | South Africa | 73.7 | 26.3 |
| 17 | Detroit, MI | United States | 72.8 | 27.2 |
| 18 | Cali | Colombia | 72.0 | 28.0 |
| 19 | Baltimore, MD | United States | 72.0 | 28.0 |
| 20 | Tijuana | Mexico | 71.5 | 28.5 |
| 21 | Albuquerque, NM | United States | 71.0 | 29.0 |
| 22 | Porto Alegre | Brazil | 70.7 | 29.3 |
| 23 | Lima | Peru | 70.2 | 29.8 |
| 24 | Saint Louis, MO | United States | 70.0 | 30.0 |
| 25 | Sao Paulo | Brazil | 69.9 | 30.1 |
| 26 | Kingston | Jamaica | 69.1 | 30.9 |
| 27 | Oakland, CA | United States | 68.9 | 31.1 |
| 28 | Lagos | Nigeria | 68.8 | 31.2 |
| 29 | Damascus | Syria | 68.2 | 31.8 |
| 30 | Windhoek | Namibia | 67.6 | 32.4 |
This reflects subjective perceptions, not official crime statistics, and can fluctuate with new contributions. South African cities dominate the top ranks, followed by Latin American and some U.S. cities.
Madlanga Commission
The Madlanga Commission (established July 2025; interim report December 2025) exposed deep law enforcement corruption and criminal infiltration, is eroding confidence in Law enforcement ability.The commission has investigated allegations of widespread criminality, political interference, and corruption within the South African Police Service (SAPS), National Prosecuting Authority, and broader criminal justice system. It was triggered by explosive claims from KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Police Commissioner Lt-Gen Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi in July 2025, who accused senior politicians, police officials, prosecutors, and intelligence operatives of collusion, including dismantling a task team probing political killings and links to drug cartels. The interim report (details not fully public yet) is expected to address initial phases, including witness allegations.
Likely Impact on Tourism and Revenue
Tourism contributes around 7-9% of the country’s GDP and provides millions in forex. Despite resilient 2025 growth, heightened perceptions could deter risk-averse travelers from key markets (US, UK, Germany, Australia). Forecasts suggest a potential 5-15% dip in arrivals if advisories intensify, causing a “nose-bleed” in revenue (billions lost). However, SA tourism has historically weathered warnings—focusing on safe enclaves (safaris, Cape Town)—and initiatives like R175m tourist safety squads may mitigate.
What Needs to Change
- Policy — Implement Madlanga recommendations: purge corrupt officers, boost funding/intelligence for visible policing, expand tourist protection units.
- Attitudes — Shift from denial to proactive community engagement; marketing campaigns highlighting safe experiences and successes (e.g., Cape Town’s crime drops).
- Possibility of a turn-around? Yes—Colombia reduced homicide rates dramatically post-2000s via reforms; Rwanda transformed perceptions through zero-tolerance policing. SA’s challenges are entrenched (administration corruption, inequality and high youth unemployment fuel crime), but sustained political will, private sector partnerships, and data-driven hotspots targeting could reverse trends over 5-10 years. Short-term: Perception management is key to avoiding severe 2026 losses.
