Last update: July 12, 2026
Updated dailySaint Martin
Safety Score
Only for experienced travelers
Limited data — score leans on a cautious regional baseline.
Saint Martin has a safety score of 5.3/10 as of July 12, 2026, rated as Moderate risk and ranking 206th out of 248 countries worldwide. The biggest concern is crime (4.6/10), while the strongest area is crime (4.6/10). This score is calculated daily from 40+ independent public sources.
What are the safety risk areas?
Indicator-level detail
Health 4.4/10 When a pillar has low data coverage, its contribution to the overall score is reduced or excluded. · Moderate · Coverage: 0%
Governance 4.4/10 When a pillar has low data coverage, its contribution to the overall score is reduced or excluded. · Moderate · Coverage: 0%
Environment 4.4/10 When a pillar has low data coverage, its contribution to the overall score is reduced or excluded. · Moderate · Coverage: 0%
Crime 4.6/10 · Moderate · Coverage: 50%
| Indicators | Value | Source | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| wb homicide | 5.5/10 | worldbank | 2016 |
Conflict 5.1/10 When a pillar has low data coverage, its contribution to the overall score is reduced or excluded. · Moderate · Coverage: 25%
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What do governments say?
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it safe to travel to Saint Martin in 2026?
Yes, but with caution — Saint Martin is moderately safe: as of July 2026 it scores 5.3/10 on our daily safety index, classified as Moderate risk. Most trips are trouble-free, but some risks deserve attention.
The score is an uncertainty-weighted (Bayesian shrinkage) geometric mean of five pillars — conflict (30%), crime (25%), health (20%), governance (15%) and environment (10%) — combined with a calibrated consensus of government travel advisories, so a weak pillar drags the overall score down more than a strong one lifts it, and thin or stale data pulls a country's score toward a cautious regional baseline rather than guessing. crime (4.6/10) is Saint Martin's strongest pillar, while the score is pulled down by crime (4.6/10) and above all by crime (4.6/10).
This pillar reflects violent crime, theft and organized criminal activity — a low score calls for extra street awareness, especially outside the main tourist areas. It is recalculated every day from public sources including government travel advisories, the Global Peace Index, the INFORM Risk Index and World Bank indicators.
What is the biggest risk when traveling to Saint Martin?
No single factor stands out as critical for Saint Martin: its relatively weakest area is crime at 4.6/10, close to the global mid-range. This pillar reflects violent crime, theft and organized criminal activity — a low score calls for extra street awareness, especially outside the main tourist areas.
The main signal behind this is homicide rate (World Bank). Its strongest pillar is crime at 4.6/10.
What do government travel advisories say about Saint Martin?
As of July 2026, Saint Martin has 2 government travel advisories on record. The overall picture is reassuring: most governments advise only normal precautions for Saint Martin, and none currently raises it above a low-level advisory.
How does Saint Martin compare to nearby countries?
| Country | Score | Conflict | Crime | Health | Governance | Environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | 8.3 | 8.6 | 8.2 | 7.9 | 8.0 | 6.2 |
| Barbados | 7.9 | 8.7 | 7.0 | 7.2 | 7.5 | 7.5 |
| Uruguay | 7.7 | 8.2 | 6.7 | 7.2 | 7.4 | 7.1 |
| Suriname | 7.7 | 8.6 | 7.2 | 7.2 | 6.2 | 6.1 |
| Saint Martin | 5.3 | 5.1 | 4.6 | 4.4 | 4.4 | 4.4 |
Related Countries
In the same region
See all countries in this regionSimilar safety scores
How has the safety score changed over time?
Where does the data come from?
- advisoriesFresh
Travel advisories from 37 governments worldwide including US, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, Netherlands, Japan, Slovakia, France, New Zealand, Ireland, Finland, Hong Kong, Brazil, Austria, Philippines, Belgium, Denmark, Singapore, Romania, Serbia, Estonia, Croatia, Argentina, Italy, Spain, South Korea, Taiwan, China, India, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary, and Portugal
Fetched: Jul 12, 2026
- worldbankFresh
World Bank Development Indicators -- child mortality and PM2.5 air pollution
Fetched: Jul 12, 2026