Knife-Related Killings Fall 21% to Record Low in England and Wales
ONS crime statistics show homicides at lowest level in nearly 50 years, with knife murders and overall crime declining
Auf einen Blick
- Police-recorded knife or sharp instrument killings fell 21% to 172 in 2025, the lowest since data collection began in 2010-11.
- Total homicides dropped 6% to 503, reaching near-50-year lows.
- Overall knife crime fell 10% to 49,151 offences, while shoplifting decreased 1% to 509,566 incidents.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The ONS has been collecting comparable knife crime data since 2010-11. The Crime Survey for England and Wales is a face-to-face survey asking people aged 16 and over about their experiences of crime in the past year. The Home Office recently clarified recording guidelines for shoplifting involving violence or threats.
Killings involving a knife or sharp instrument fell by 21% last year, according to figures from police forces in England and Wales. It comes after official data previously showed that homicides had fallen to their lowest level in nearly 50 years.
Crime statistics published on Thursday by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed 172 homicides involving a knife or sharp instrument were recorded by police forces in 2025, compared with 217 in 2024. Last year's number of knife-related killings is also the lowest since comparable data was first collected in 2010-11.
The dataset also shows that the total number of homicide offences last year - when there were 503 offences - fell by 6% compared with 2024, when there were 534. Homicide offences includes murder, manslaughter, infanticide and causing or allowing the death or serious injury of a child or vulnerable adult, according to the Crown Prosecution Service.
Overall recorded knife-related crime also fell by 10% in 2025, compared to 2024, with 49,151 offences.
To build a bigger picture of crime in England and Wales, the ONS also referred to estimates from its annual crime survey in the new dataset. The Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) is a face-to-face survey which asks people aged 16 and over about their experiences of crime in the past year. It found there were an estimated 2.6 million theft incidents in 2025, an 11% fall compared to the previous year.
Actual police data included in the ONS dataset also showed a 1% fall in recorded shoplifting offences to 509,566 in 2025, compared with 2024, despite recent surges in the crime. But the ONS notes that the Home Office recently clarified to police forces that they should record shoplifting where violence or threats of violence are used as robbery of business property. It said this had likely had a "small effect" on the number of shoplifting offences recorded since April last year.
Offene Fragen
- What specific factors contributed to the decline in knife crime?
- Will the downward trend continue into 2026?
- How will the new shoplifting recording guidelines affect future statistics?






