LONDON — London's murder rate fell in 2025 to its lowest level in decades, officials said Monday. Mayor Sadiq Khan said the figures disprove claims spread by U.S. President Donald Trump and others on the political right that crime is out of control in Britain's capital.
Police recorded 97 homicides in London in 2025, down from 109 in 2024 and the fewest since 2014. The Metropolitan Police force said the rate by population is the lowest since comparable records began in 1997, at 1.1 homicides for every 100,000 people.
That compares to 1.6 per 100,000 in Paris, 2.8 in New York and 3.2 in Berlin, the force said.
''There are some politicians and commentators who've been spamming our social media with an endless stream of distortions and untruths, painting an image of a dystopian London,'' Khan told The Associated Press. ''And nothing could be further from the truth.''
London mayor at odds with Trump
Trump, who has been directing insults at Khan for a decade, said in September that crime in the city is ''through the roof.'' He has called Khan a ''stone-cold loser,'' a ''nasty person'' and – in front of the U.N. General Assembly in September – a ''terrible, terrible mayor.'' Trump has also claimed without foundation that Khan wants to bring Sharia, or Islamic law, to London.
City officials say a combination of targeted policing aimed at organized crime and a violence reduction unit that aims to stop young people from getting involved with gangs have helped reduce violent crime.
Declining rates for murder and other violent crime are only part of London's crime story. Many Londoners have firsthand experience of phone-snatching or have witnessed the surge in shoplifting documented by the Office for National Statistics.