Salem, OR
MoveScore 64 out of 100 (Fair) · 4 of 6 federal sources
Score Breakdown
Each sub-score is normalized to 0-100. Missing sub-scores are skipped, not penalized.
What the Federal Data Says
Safety (FBI UCR)
Violent crime rate: 680.9 per 100k
Property crime rate: 2228.1 per 100k
Safety score: 42 (D)
Water (EPA SDWIS)
Safety score: 85 (A)
Recent violations: 0
Fiscal Health (Census ASPEP)
Per-capita spending: $15,959
Fiscal score: 68
Hospitals (CMS HCAHPS)
Average quality rating: 3.0 / 5
Hospitals tracked: 2
Other Cities in Oregon
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the MoveScore of Salem, OR?
Salem has a MoveScore of 64 out of 100 (grade C, Fair). The score averages 4 of six federal livability dimensions with equal weight.
Where does the Salem data come from?
Salem sub-scores come from federal government sources: the FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program for crime, EPA SDWIS for water safety, EPA AQS for air quality, NCES CCD and EDFacts for schools, Census ASPEP for municipal fiscal health, and CMS HCAHPS for hospital quality.
Is Salem safe?
Salem has a safety score of 42 (grade D), based on an FBI-reported violent crime rate of 680.9 per 100,000 residents and a property crime rate of 2228.1 per 100,000.
Sub-scores are normalized to 0-100 and averaged with equal weight. Missing sources are skipped. A composite requires at least three of the six sub-scores.
The this entity record above pulls directly from federal datasets including BLS, Census ACS, FBI Crime Data, NOAA Climate Normals, and NCES. What follows is the per-entity context — how this entity sits in the broader U.S. city relocation factors — cost, climate, wages, crime, education distribution and which underlying factors drive the headline numbers.
The methodology behind every numeric value on this page is publicly documented on the federal datasets including BLS, Census ACS, FBI Crime Data, NOAA Climate Normals, and NCES portal and described in detail on this site’s methodology page. Refresh cadence varies by underlying series; the page surfaces the as-of date for each number so readers can trace any figure back to the source release.
Practical use of this page is in combination with the comparison and ranking pages elsewhere on the site, which surface the same data for this entity’s peers within U.S. cities and metros. A single-entity reading without peer context can be misleading when an entity is an outlier on one axis but typical on another.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (cost), Census Bureau ACS, FBI UCR, NOAA, 2026.