
TravelRiskCalculator.com’s live dashboard, updated early on 30 June 2026, keeps Paris at a composite score of 26/100 (moderate risk) but flags a jump in the city’s crime sub-index to 48/100, its highest level since records began in 2024. The data aggregator combines Numbeo statistics, State Department advisories and real-time incident feeds. The uptick comes as the capital braces for peak summer tourism and the European Athletics Championships next month. Pick-pocketing on public transport and phone snatching on electric scooters remain the principal threats, while violent crime stays comparatively low.
Travellers looking to secure the correct entry documents before departure can streamline the process through VisaHQ; the platform’s France portal (https://www.visahq.com/france/) offers step-by-step visa guidance, real-time embassy updates and optional courier services, helping visitors tackle paperwork while they stay focused on evolving safety advice.
The platform also notes a red heat alert and a Level-1 global dengue notice—two factors that could affect outdoor events and personal health. For corporate security teams the figures reinforce standard precautions: use licensed taxis, keep electronics out of sight, and monitor city-wide SMS alerts. Event organisers are advised to revisit crowd-management plans, particularly for open-air fan zones along the Seine. Although the index is not an official government advisory, many multinationals embed it into duty-of-care platforms to trigger automated briefings. HR leaders should verify that travel insurance polices remain valid under a ‘moderate’ classification and ensure employees have emergency hot-line numbers stored before arrival.
Travellers looking to secure the correct entry documents before departure can streamline the process through VisaHQ; the platform’s France portal (https://www.visahq.com/france/) offers step-by-step visa guidance, real-time embassy updates and optional courier services, helping visitors tackle paperwork while they stay focused on evolving safety advice.
The platform also notes a red heat alert and a Level-1 global dengue notice—two factors that could affect outdoor events and personal health. For corporate security teams the figures reinforce standard precautions: use licensed taxis, keep electronics out of sight, and monitor city-wide SMS alerts. Event organisers are advised to revisit crowd-management plans, particularly for open-air fan zones along the Seine. Although the index is not an official government advisory, many multinationals embed it into duty-of-care platforms to trigger automated briefings. HR leaders should verify that travel insurance polices remain valid under a ‘moderate’ classification and ensure employees have emergency hot-line numbers stored before arrival.