Queens

Is Rockaway Beach Safe? Queens Livability, Crime & Rent

Rockaway Beach offers a distinctive living experience in Queens.

#16 of 27 in QueensBased on 0 active listingsUpdated 2026-04-26
5.6/ 10
Rockaway Beach, Queens — Wikipedia
Photo via Wikipedia — Rockaway Beach, Queens

Rockaway Beach at a glance

Borough
Queens
Livability score
5.6/10
Borough rank
#16 of 27
Safety verdict
Higher Than Average
Crimes (12 mo)
2,770
Median listing
$0
Subway stations
5 (Beach 90 St, Beach 98 St, Beach 67 St)
Active listings
0
Data updated
2026-04-26

Is Rockaway Beach Safe?

Rockaway Beach, Queens scores 5.6/10 for overall livability, ranking #16 of 27 Queens neighborhoods. Rockaway Beach offers a distinctive living experience in Queens.

This score aggregates live NYPD crime data, 311 safety complaints, shooting incidents, and building health signals within walking distance. Safety varies by block — check a specific Rockaway Beach address below for a block-level breakdown.

Score Overview

Financial5.0 (-1.0 vs borough)
Livability (ART)5.8 (+1.0 vs borough)
Outdoor5.0 (+0.0 vs borough)
Investment5.0 (-0.5 vs borough)
Commute7.0 (+1.5 vs borough)
Practical5.0 (-0.3 vs borough)

Vertical line = borough median. Scale: 0-10.

Neighborhood Character

Rockaway Beach is a neighborhood in Queens with its own distinct character and community.

Analysis based on 0 properties scored across 30+ data points

a person sitting on a bench under a canopy of trees
Photo by Süleyman BİLGİN on Unsplash

Livability & Restoration

Tree Canopy

43 trees

Avg within 200m | Density: 9.5/10

10 additional trees per block correlates with health benefits equivalent to being 7 years younger (Kardan et al., 2015)

Park Access

Arverne East Nature Preserve

Avg 456m away | Score: 2.5/10

Living within 300m of green space associated with 30% fewer antidepressant prescriptions (Taylor et al., 2015)

Acoustic Quality

8/10

Noise proxy score (higher = quieter)

Chronic noise above 55 dB at night associated with 8% cardiovascular mortality increase (Basner et al., 2014)

Street Character

0/10

Enclosure: 0/10

What is the ART Score?

ART stands for Attention Restoration Theory (Kaplan & Kaplan, 1989) — the framework environmental psychologists use to measure whether a place helps your brain recover from mental fatigue, or pushes it deeper into overload. Cities deplete directed attention (the effortful focus you use at work); exposure to restorative environments replenishes it.

We compute an ART score for every block by combining four signals: access to restorative zones (parks, museums, libraries), sensory load (nightlife and tourist density), street vitality (Jane Jacobs’ “eyes on the street”), and third places (Oldenburg’s informal community spaces).

ART Score for Rockaway Beach5.8/10
P25–P75: 5.26.4Queens median: 4.8/10

In line with the Queens median — typical city stimulus with typical restorative access.

What drives the score

  • +
    Restorative zones. Museums, libraries, community gardens, and parks within walking distance. “Soft fascination” stimuli (clouds, tree branches, water) let directed attention recover without effort — the Kaplans’ core mechanism.
  • Sensory load. Bar and nightclub density (5+ within 150m), firehouse siren corridors, tourist chokepoints, and very high foot traffic push the score down by up to 8 points.
  • +
    Street vitality (Jacobs, 1961). Permitted block parties, farmers markets, and community festivals over the past 12 months — a proxy for “eyes on the street” and the informal surveillance that makes blocks feel safe and maintained.
  • +
    Third places (Oldenburg, 1989). Cafés, public plazas (POPS), community centers — the “anchors of community life” that buffer against social isolation. Loneliness has been linked to 29% higher incident coronary heart disease risk (Valtorta et al., 2016).

Health mechanism. Directed-attention fatigue (DAF) is linked to impaired decision-making, irritability, and elevated cortisol. A meta-analysis of 60+ studies (Ohly et al., 2016) found restorative environment exposure significantly improves attention-task performance (Hedges’ g ≈ 0.32) and reduces negative affect.

Theoretical foundations. Kaplan & Kaplan (1989), The Experience of Nature; Jacobs (1961), The Death and Life of Great American Cities; Oldenburg (1989), The Great Good Place.

Full ART scoring methodology →

a person walking down a street holding an umbrella
Photo by David Jones on Unsplash

Transit & Commute

Subway Stations

AS
Beach 90 St
AS
Beach 98 St
A
Beach 67 St
A
Beach 60 St
A
Beach 44 St

Commute Score

7/10

Borough median: 5.5/10

Walk Score Proxy

0/10

Based on street geometry analysis

a row of browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns browns
Photo by Santeri on Unsplash

Financial Landscape

Median Price

$0

Price per Sq Ft

$0

Price Distribution

$0$0
10th pctileMedian: $090th pctile
Skyscrapers and construction crane against sky
Photo by Bradley Andrews on Unsplash

Investment Indicators

Avg Unused FAR

0 sqft

Development rights potential

Unused development rights valued at $30-$80/sqft in Brooklyn (Glaeser, 2011)

Avg Days on Market

0

Market velocity signal

Multi-Family Stock

0%

2-4 family buildings

Multi-family owner-occupants build 2.4x wealth vs single-family (Herbert, 2013)

Investment Score5/10
A peaceful park path lined with trees and lampposts.
Photo by Quincy Rose on Unsplash

Outdoor & Green Space

Avg Tree Count

43

Within 200m radius

Canopy Density

9.5/10

Normalized canopy coverage

Park Network

  • Arverne East Nature Preserve
  • Vernam Barbadoes Peninsula
  • Brant Point Wildlife Sanctuary
  • Cardozo Playground
  • Conch Playground

Avg distance: 456m

Sunlight fills an empty room with large windows.
Photo by Bradley Andrews on Unsplash

Practical Living

Who Rockaway Beach Is For

NYC newcomers

A neighborhood worth exploring for its unique qualities.

Pros & Cons

Strengths

Rockaway Beach

Based on neighborhood data

Trade-offs

Competitive market

High demand across NYC

Score Any Address in Rockaway Beach

Get detailed livability scores based on building health, transit access, safety, noise levels, and 15+ NYC data sources.

Search an Address in Rockaway Beach

Frequently Asked Questions about Rockaway Beach

1

Is Rockaway Beach safe?

By NYPD data, Rockaway Beach is rated "Higher Than Average" — safer than 42% of Queens neighborhoods. 2,770 crime incidents and 10 shooting incidents over the past 12 months. See the safety page for the full breakdown.

2

What is the average rent in Rockaway Beach?

Rents in Rockaway Beach, Queens vary significantly by building and apartment type. The median listing price is $0. Use DwellCheck to research specific addresses.

3

How is transit access in Rockaway Beach?

Rockaway Beach has a commute score of 7/10. 5 subway stations serve the area: Beach 90 St, Beach 98 St, Beach 67 St.

4

What are the best streets in Rockaway Beach?

The best streets depend on your priorities. Use DwellCheck to compare specific addresses across livability, safety, transit, and environmental factors.

5

What is Rockaway Beach known for?

Rockaway Beach sits in Queens and ranks #16 of 27 Queens neighborhoods on DwellCheck's livability score (5.6/10). It's served by 5 subway stations (Beach 90 St, Beach 98 St, Beach 67 St), with a median listing price of $0. Rockaway Beach offers a distinctive living experience in Queens.

6

What is it like to live in Rockaway Beach?

Living in Rockaway Beach, Queens weights against six livability dimensions: practical (HPD-violation density), commute (subway proximity), arts/culture (venue density), outdoor (parks + trees), financial (price level), investment (price trend). Rockaway Beach's composite is 5.6/10. Rockaway Beach offers a distinctive living experience in Queens. For the block-by-block view, run any specific Rockaway Beach address through DwellCheck.

7

Is Rockaway Beach expensive?

Median listing price in Rockaway Beach, Queens is $0 based on 0 active listings as of 2026-04-26. Whether that reads "expensive" depends on the comparison: it's lower than Manhattan averages and varies considerably by building. Rent-stabilized units in Rockaway Beach can run 20-40% below the median; check DHCR rent history for any specific address to verify.

8

Can you walk around Rockaway Beach at night?

Rockaway Beach is classified as "Higher Than Average" by NYPD CompStat data. Over the past 12 months it recorded 10 shooting incidents and 2,770 total crime incidents. Walking at night carries the same risk profile as anywhere in NYC: stay on commercial corridors with foot traffic, avoid empty side streets after midnight, and prefer subway lines that run 24/7.

9

Is Rockaway Beach dangerous?

By NYPD data, Rockaway Beach is rated "Higher Than Average" — safer than 42% of Queens neighborhoods. 2,770 crime incidents over 12 months. Block-level risk varies; check the address-level safety score for any specific street or building.

10

What parts of Rockaway Beach should I avoid?

NYPD CompStat reports incidents at the precinct level, not block-by-block, so a granular "avoid this street" answer isn't possible from public data alone. The most reliable signal at the block level is DwellCheck's address-level safety score, which weights NYPD incidents within a 250m radius of a specific building. As a general rule across NYC: industrial blocks with no foot traffic are higher-risk than residential blocks; subway-station-adjacent commercial corridors are lowest-risk.

11

Is Rockaway Beach a good place to live?

Rockaway Beach scores 5.6/10 for overall livability and ranks in the 42th percentile for safety in Queens. Rockaway Beach offers a distinctive living experience in Queens. Whether it's a good fit depends on what you weight: families, solo renters, and remote workers each prioritize different factors (noise, transit access, parks, building quality).

12

Is Rockaway Beach a good place to live?

Rockaway Beach is a popular Queens neighborhood. Explore the data to decide if it fits your needs.

Data from NYC Open Data & DwellScore analysis (311, DOB, HPD, NYPD, MTA, Census, Trees, PLUTO)

Not financial or real estate advice