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Rural Hertfordshire’s villages and farms offer tranquillity and space, but they also present unique security challenges. With fewer neighbours nearby and long stretches of unlit roads, rural properties can be attractive targets for burglars. Moreover, the true scale of rural crime often goes unreported, meaning that its impact on insurance premiums, local food prices and community well-being can be underestimated .
Properties set back from public roads, with minimal natural surveillance, allow offenders to operate under cover of darkness. High-value, easily-portable items—such as quad bikes, tools or GPS units—are particularly at risk: GPS thefts alone climbed by 137% in 2023, costing farmers an estimated £4.2 million . Combine this with the fact that rural crime is often under-reported, and you have a recipe for repeat offending .
In East Hertfordshire’s rural ward, burglary was the third most commonly reported crime in November 2024, with 20 incidents logged . Recognising this, Hertfordshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner convened rural priority working groups in late 2024 to hear directly from farming and village communities about their security concerns .
Doors and windows should be fitted with British Standard deadlocks and reinforced frames.
Outbuildings and garages need ground-level window grilles and steel padlocks on doors.
Perimeter security, including solid gates and thorny hedging, can deter opportunistic intruders.
Security lighting—ideally motion-activated—can eliminate the darkness that burglars exploit . For further detailed recommendations, see NFU Mutual’s 2024 Rural Crime Report .
CCTV systems with night-vision cameras and remote alerts help monitor isolated areas.
Alarm systems connected to a monitoring service can summon help even when neighbours are miles away.
Property marking kits, like SelectaDNA, allow every tool or piece of equipment to be uniquely coded. Hertfordshire Constabulary has begun trialling such kits—funded by the PCC—to improve detection and recovery of stolen items .
Neighbourhood Watch and Farm Watch schemes foster collective vigilance, sharing intelligence on suspicious activity.
Local liaison officers and the Rural Operational Support Team (ROST) provide bespoke advice and rapid response for rural incidents.
Prompt reporting of even minor thefts helps police build a clearer picture and allocate resources effectively . The PCC’s recent farm-yard visits underscored the value of this partnership approach .
Well-documented security measures and property-marking records can reduce insurance premiums and speed up claims. The PCC’s funding for SelectaDNA trials reflects a broader push to make rural thefts less attractive to organised gangs .
Despite a 3% fall in police-recorded burglary to 264,963 offences in the year to June 2024 and a similar 3% drop to 266,489 offences by March 2024 , rural Hertfordshire remains vulnerable. By combining robust physical security, smart technology, community vigilance and proactive engagement with Hertfordshire Constabulary, landowners and residents can significantly reduce the likelihood and impact of burglaries on their properties.


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