Crime Statistics 2025: 80 Knife Attacks a Day, Migrants Overrepresented

Germany’s latest police crime statistics show an overall decline in offences, but a sharp rise in specific categories, with around 80 knife attacks a day. Non-German suspects remain markedly overrepresented in violent crime.

Germany’s crime rate fell overall in 2025, but knife attacks and violent offences remain high. Photo: Marijan Murat/picture alliance via Getty Images

Germany’s crime rate fell overall in 2025, but knife attacks and violent offences remain high. Photo: Marijan Murat/picture alliance via Getty Images

Germany recorded fewer offences in 2025 than the previous year. The Police Crime Statistics registered 5.5 million cases, a decline of 5.6%. The number of suspects also fell to 2.05 million. At first glance, much points to an easing of the situation. On closer inspection, that impression does not hold.

One central finding remains unchanged. Non-German suspects are still clearly overrepresented in violent crime, accounting for 42.9%. At the same time, their share of the total population in Germany is around 15%. The gap highlights a structural imbalance. The decline of 7.2% among migrant suspects does little to alter that picture.

At the same time, a shift within age groups is becoming apparent. While the number of juvenile suspects is falling, the number of child suspects is rising again. Violent crime is therefore increasingly moving into younger age groups.

Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt of the CSU described the figures as “a beginning, but no reason for complacency”. What matters, he said, is that security in everyday life genuinely improves, not merely in statistical terms. The clear-up rate remains stable at 57.9%, with 3.2 million cases solved. Yet that stability points more to stagnation than progress.

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Between Easing and Escalation

“Roughly 80 knife attacks per day” captures the reality behind otherwise declining overall figures. In 2025, police recorded 29,243 knife attacks. The level remains high, with only a marginal increase. At the same time, threats involving knives rose by 9.5%.

The contradictory trend is particularly evident in serious offences. While overall numbers are falling, individual forms of violence continue to rise. The number of rapes increased by 9.0% in 2025. Since 2018, that amounts to an increase of around 72%. Perpetrators predominantly come from the victims’ social environment. Men account for 98.6% of suspects. The share of non-German suspects stands at 38.5%.

At the same time, the dark figure remains substantial. According to the Federal Criminal Police Office study Security and Crime in Germany, the reporting rate for rape and sexual abuse is just 6.2%. The true scale of these offences is therefore likely to be significantly higher than official figures suggest.

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Other indicators of violence are also rising. Firearm-related violent crime reached 3,166 cases, the highest level since 2016. Shots were actually fired in 1,371 cases. At the same time, crime is increasingly shifting into digital spaces. While domestically recorded cybercrime cases declined slightly, offences originating abroad rose significantly. The number of such cases already exceeds those committed within Germany.

Federal Criminal Police Office President Holger Münch spoke of a fundamental transformation. Crime, he said, is becoming “more digital, more international and, in some areas, more brutal”. The trend is particularly visible in fraud. While domestic offences are declining, the financial damage from crimes committed abroad rose to €2.3bn.

Stable Sense of Security, Growing Unease

Despite these developments, the subjective sense of security remains surprisingly stable. Three quarters of the population feel safe in their neighborhood at night. Yet that figure is misleading.

In public spaces, a different picture emerges. Some 45% of people feel unsafe at night on public transport. At railway stations, in parks and in public squares, the sense of security is even weaker.

Young people are particularly affected. A victim survey by the Federal Criminal Police Office shows that 8.5% of 16- and 17-year-olds have been victims of assault. That is more than twice as many as in 2020. Drug-related crime also presents a distorted picture. The sharp decline of 27.7% is largely due to the legalization of cannabis. At the same time, offences involving cocaine, methamphetamine and new psychoactive substances continue to rise.

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The chair of the Conference of Interior Ministers, Andy Grote, described the trend as “encouraging”, but warned of significant shortcomings in the protection of women. Sexualized violence, including in digital spaces, continues to increase. The 2025 crime statistics thus depict a country in transition. Traditional offence figures are declining, but the threat landscape is shifting. Violence is becoming more intense in certain areas, crime more international, and key risk groups remain prominent.