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23 Feb 2026

Fraud jumped in 2025 even as number of major crimes fell – gardai

Fraud jumped in 2025 even as number of major crimes fell – gardai

There was a surge in reports of fraud in Ireland in 2025, despite a fall in most major crimes, newly released Garda figures show.

An Garda Siochana’s provisional crime statistics for last year reveal fraud and economic crimes were up 137% compared with 2024.

There were large increases in offences involving deception, up 273%; forgery, up 160%; shopping or online auctions, up 183%; and money laundering, up 164%.

There were, however, significant reductions in the use of counterfeit cash which was down 77% and insurance fraud which was down 43%.

Gardai did attribute some of the rise in reports of fraud to a “backlog” on reporting from previous years.

But they said the surge in fraud was also fuelled by online offending.

Harmful communications, another digitally driven crime, was among the few other categories to see a large increase.

There were 750 incidents reported in 2025 compared with just under 600 in 2024, with the distribution of ‘grossly offensive communication’ up 68%.

There were fewer reported instances of most major crimes and gardai pointed to CSO figures which show Ireland recorded a 7% reduction in overall crime between 2019 and 2024, despite the population increasing by 9.3% since 2019.

The new figures showed the number of robberies, where something is stolen with the use or threat of force, lowered significantly.

That meant in Dublin alone there were 230 fewer robberies in 2025 compared with 2024.

Burglaries also fell, with the north-west seeing the most dramatic reduction after the number of non-aggravated burglaries fell by 34%.

Gardai say this is part of the success of Operation Thor, which actively targets organised crime gangs and repeat offenders.

They say it has reduced the number of residential burglaries by 75% in a decade.

The figures also give a snapshot of the impact of other Garda activity.

They say during the year their teams seized 147 million euros worth of illegal drugs and around six million euros worth of cash and gold.

They say there were more demonstrations last year compared to 2024, around 1,300 around 12% more than 2024.

But the numbers also reveal some of the darkest parts of Irish life and society.

188 people were killed on Irish roads in 2025, in a year where the total number of crashes went up by 4%.

And gardai said they received almost 67,000 calls about domestic abuse last year, nearly 1,300 every week.

The number of murder and manslaughter offences remained the same as 2024, but it still meant 40 people died at the hands of others in 2025.

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