Crime almost certainly fell considerably in the United States in the first six months of 2025, reported Jeff-alytics. The decline in crime that began in 2023 and picked up steam in 2024 has accelerated even faster so far in 2025. Both violent and property crime likely fell with large drops in both murder and motor vehicle theft leading the way.
The
national decline in murder stands out due to extraordinary drops in many
cities. New Orleans recorded fewer murders through June 2025 than any year
since 1970 even in spite of the January 1st terrorist attack. New York City has
only recorded fewer murders once through June since 1960 (136 in 2017).
Philadelphia recorded the fewest murders since 1969, Los Angeles since 1966,
Baltimore since 1965, Detroit since 1964, and San Francisco had the fewest ever
recorded (monthly data available to 1960).
As a
reminder, murder rose at the fastest rate ever recorded in 2020 and it stayed
at that consistently higher level in 2021 and 2022. Murder began
dropping in 2023 and ended up falling at the fastest rate ever
recorded that year. Then murder likely fell even faster in 2024 though we won’t
have official FBI data on that for a few months. Now, just five years after the
largest one-year increase ever, the US is on track to have the largest one-year
drop in murder ever recorded for the third straight year in 2025.
The
assessment of national crime trends can be made thanks to a variety of
independent data sources which have historically closely aligned with FBI
national estimates. These alternative sources are needed because the FBI has
reported no data on national crime trends since reporting Q2 2024 data last
year.
Relying on
sampling is a workaround to the traditional slowness of FBI data, but there is
always a risk in interpreting the results of 18,000 agencies from a sample of
400+ agencies. That said, the size of the crime declines articulated by
independent sources and the historical accuracy of those sources suggests that
large declines will hold up even if the unofficial sources are off by more than
usual.
The most
recent formal FBI data is 18 months old now while the CDC is just finishing up
its provisional 2024 count. Fortunately, both the Gun Violence Archive (GVA)
and Real-Time Crime Index (RTCI)
tend to mimic the annual changes seen in the official sources. As such, these
unofficial tallies can tell us what is happening without having to wait 9 or
more months for the official word.
Both the
GVA and RTCI point to massive declines in fatal shootings and murders occurring
in 2025, the third straight year of large declines. The RTCI is now available
through May 2025, and that reporting can be supplemented by sampling large
cities with publicly available data to see that the trend continued through
midyear.
The bottom
line is that crime is falling in the United States led by the largest one-year
percentage point decline in murder ever recorded. If that sentence sounds
familiar it’s because it’s basically identical to what I wrote last year about
our crime trends.
It is late
enough in the year and the declines are large enough to feel confident that
these trends will generally hold through the rest of the year. The exact degree
of downward motion in the nation’s crime stats will still take some months to
tease out, but a large decline is almost certainly inevitable at this point.
Real-Time
Crime Index
The
Real-Time Crime index was updated last week through May 2025. The new RTCI
sample has data from 421 agencies representing more than 102 million people.
This sample makes up around half of all the murders that occur in the US in a
given year, so it’s a reliable bellwether of the nation’s murder trend. (As an
aside, this is our biggest sample yet in terms of agencies and population
covered).
The RTCI
through May 2025 shows murder down 20 percent relative to the first 5 months of
2024, down 37 percent relative to the first 5 months of 2021 (at the height of
the murder surge), and down 9 percent relative to the first 5 months of 2019
(pre-surge). Murder rolling over the last 12 months in this sample has fallen
below 2019’s level
Violent
crime is down roughly 11 percent in the RTCI while property crime is down 12
percent. There is undoubtedly some underreporting occurring as agencies still
have 9 or so months to correct missing reports. But that issue does not impact
the finding of large scale declines in every crime category even if the degree
of the decline is likely slightly overstated by the collection methodology.
The
decline is fairly uniform across cities/counties and population sizes. In 13
agencies covering 1 million people or more, murder is down 20.1 percent,
violent crime is down 11 percent and property crime is down 12 percent. In 192
agencies covering under 100,000 people, murder is down 36 percent, violent
crime is down 9 percent and property crime is down 14 percent.
Aside from
murder, the motor vehicle theft decline stands out. Motor vehicle thefts surged
in 2022 but have been plunging ever since. The decline in motor vehicle thefts
started at the very end of 2023 and has been steady ever since. The surge in
auto thefts that kicked off in 2020 has not been falling as long so it is still
higher than pre-COVID levels, but we aren’t yet seeing signs of a slowdown.
Gun
Violence Archive
The Gun
Violence Archive data through June paints a similarly rosy picture of our
nation’s gun violence trend (though even a large decline leaves gun violence
far too prevalent). If a picture is worth 1,000 words then the next three
graphs tell the story in 3,000 words.
The GVA
isn't exact but it's another strong indicator that the historic drop in gun
violence is continuing through June 2025.
Sampling
Cities
The RTCI
is updated through May which obviously isn’t quite midyear (though it's
close!). I grabbed publicly available murder data from the 30 cities with the
most murders in 2023 plus Jacksonville (which didn’t report in 2023 but would
have been on this list if they had) to clearly see that the RTCI trend carried
through midyear.
And…yep.
That’s a huge decline through midyear in a decently large sample of cities.
Violent and property crime are harder to sample because fewer agencies publish
aggregated counts, but there’s no reason to suspect any change from the
available May data once June is counted.
The
Midyear Final Word
The final
word on crime through midyear is that there is a sizable decline in every
category of Uniform Crime Report Part I crime. The declines in crime shown by
the RTCI data through May suggests crime may decline at or near record levels
in every crime type we have measured since 1960. It’s also plausible that
multiple crime types will feature the largest drop ever recorded moniker in
2025.
Not every
crime is reported to police, there are still six months left in the year for
these trends to moderate, and not every city or county is seeing historic
declines (or declines at all). Yet the data so far this year paints the picture
of declines that began in 2023 and 2024 continuing (and accelerating) through
the first half of 2025.
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