Home / Crime and Justice / Online Child Abuse Surges 25% in England & Wales
Online Child Abuse Surges 25% in England & Wales
11 Dec
Summary
- Online child exploitation and abuse increased by 26% in one year.
- Half of online child abuse crimes were committed by children aged 10-17.
- Snapchat is the most frequently used platform in reported offenses.

Figures from England and Wales reveal a dramatic 26% increase in online child sexual exploitation and abuse over the past year, with 51,672 offenses recorded. This alarming trend has prompted calls from police leadership for social media companies to implement more robust AI-driven protections to prevent the sharing of harmful content. The youngest offenders, aged 10-17, are implicated in half of these crimes, highlighting a critical need for effective interventions targeting this age group.
Snapchat has emerged as the platform most frequently associated with reported child exploitation and abuse, accounting for 54% of such incidents. While police recorded a 6% overall increase in child sexual exploitation offenses, the rapid rise in online incidents underscores the evolving nature of these crimes. Experts suggest that increased reporting may also be influenced by the impending Online Safety Act, though the prevalence of these offenses is believed to be genuinely growing.




