Arizona (AZ)
Sex offender registry data for Arizona. There are currently 10,500 registered sex offenders in Arizona, with a rate of 143 per 100,000 residents β below the national average of 241.
π Search Arizona's Official Sex Offender Registry β10,500
Registered Offenders
Source: NSOPW, 2024
143
Rate per 100K
#48
of 51 (Highest Rate)
What These Numbers Mean
The rate per 100,000 normalizes raw offender counts by population, allowing fair comparison between states regardless of size. A state with 5,000 offenders and 1 million people has a higher effective rate than one with 50,000 offenders and 40 million people.
Ranking #48 means Arizona has the one of the lowest sex offender registration rate in the country out of 51 jurisdictions.
Higher rates don't always indicate more crime β they can reflect stricter registration laws, longer registration periods, or more aggressive enforcement. Lower rates may mean shorter registration terms, narrower offense definitions, or compliance challenges.
Arizona vs. Neighboring States
Rate per 100,000 residents. The dashed line represents the national average (241).
Compared to National Average
Arizona's rate is 41% below the national average, ranking #48 out of 51.
ICAC Task Force in Arizona
Arizona ICAC Task Force
The Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force Program is a national network of 61 coordinated task forces representing over 5,400 federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies. The Arizona ICAC Task Force investigates and prosecutes individuals who use the internet, online communication systems, or computer technology to exploit children sexually.
ICAC task forces conduct forensic examinations, undercover investigations, and community education programs. They work closely with NCMEC and federal agencies like the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations to identify victims and bring offenders to justice.
Learn more about ICAC βContext
Why Rates Vary
Differences in state registry rates reflect multiple factors: how broadly the state defines registerable offenses, duration of registration requirements (some states require lifetime registration, others allow removal), compliance enforcement rigor, and population size. A higher rate doesn't necessarily mean more crime β it may reflect stricter registration laws.
Federal Legal Framework
Sex offender registries are mandated by federal law and administered at the state level. The Jacob Wetterling Act (1994) established the first federal requirement. Megan's Law (1996) required public access. The Adam Walsh Act / SORNA (2006) created the three-tier classification system and the National Sex Offender Public Website (NSOPW).
Resources in Arizona
Official Registries & Reporting
- Arizona Official Sex Offender Registry β
- Search Arizona on NSOPW (Federal) β
- ICAC Task Force Program β
Help & Support
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