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Town of Cary Remains One of the Safest Places to Live in the US.
CQ Press, who publishes the annual City Crime Rankings just released their annual report – the Town of Cary received the following distinguished rankings:
Safest Municipality in North Carolina for the 11th straight year.
Safest Municipality in the South East.
5th Safest in the Nation for populations between 100,000 and 499,999. (Cary’’s current population estimated to be just under 140,000)
19th Safest in the Nation out of entire list without regard to population size.
While the rankings are very impressive it was noted that the town’s ranking dropped from the previous year high ranking of 3rd safest based on population and 15th safest overall. One reason for the decline – the 3 Cary women who died at the hand of domestic violence this past year – which is very unusual for Cary – a town which usually will not have a single murder over the course of a year.
Having lived in the Cary area my entire life I sometimes take for granted how safe our Town really is. The Cary Police strive hard to keep it that way! Which brings up a great takeaway point - don’t speed in Cary! The police have the time to write speeding tickets!
Thanks for Reading our Cary Real Estate Blog – This Post Authored By: David Williams
David is a Licensed North Carolina Realtor and Broker/Owner of CaryRealEstate.com
CaryRealEstate.com Specializes in Residential Real Estate in Cary, North Carolina

Town of Cary’s Population Growth
The Town of Cary hasn’t always been the affluent bedroom community it is today, it’s grown from 22,000 in 1980 to over 130,000 and the population
has doubled every decade since 1960!
I’ve lived in the Cary area my entire life. I remember as a child in the 1970’s that Cary only had one retail store, if you didn’t find it at Rose’s then it was a road trip into Raleigh. My how things have changed! I’m often asked how I feel about the growth, I actually love it! (except for occasionally when I’m stopped at red lights that didn’t use to exist) I’ve had the fortune of ‘growing’ up with the town and I appreciate all of the cultural diversity that now exist.
As for future growth, the current Cary Town Council has a goal of limiting the growth to 3-4% annually.
If you’re curious what the growth pattern has looked like since 1980 take a look at the chart. Read the rest of this entry »














