Germany is experiencing a new peak in rape cases. A total of 13,920 recorded offences in 2025 marks a 9% increase compared with the previous year and the highest level in years. The figures come from a survey by German newspaper Welt am Sonntag across all federal states and are based on police investigations that have been formally concluded. They therefore do not refer to mere complaints but to cases in which police established a concrete suspicion of a crime.
The trend is dramatic. Police recorded 8,106 rapes in 2018. By 2024 the figure had already reached 12,771. It has now climbed to almost 14,000. Within seven years, that represents an increase of more than 70%. Even allowing for unreported cases, the finding is difficult to dismiss: the state is visibly losing ground in protecting women.
Sexual offences are known to have a high level of underreporting. Many victims remain silent because of fear, shame or dependence on the perpetrator. The officially known figures therefore already paint a disturbing picture. The reality is likely to be considerably darker.
For many women, the sense of security has long changed. Anyone travelling alone at night, using public transport or going out in large cities often experiences the shift more directly than the political class. In this respect, Germany is no longer the country it once was.
Migrants Overrepresented Among Suspects
The key question is who commits these crimes. On that point, Germany has failed for years. Political debate has avoided the issue, relativized it or framed it in moral terms. Yet the statistics cannot be ignored indefinitely.
Hesse Interior Minister Roman Poseck (CDU) put it unusually bluntly. He said that “part of the truth” is that offenders with a migration background are overrepresented in such crimes. He added that among migrants there are men “who are shaped by a completely false understanding of gender roles and therefore disregard women’s rights to self-determination”.
This is not polemical exaggeration but a description of a problem that has appeared in state-level statistics for years. Non-German suspects are heavily overrepresented in violent and sexual offences relative to their proportion of the population. In several federal states, they account for well above 40% of serious violent crimes and in some cities around half.
Young men from Syria, Afghanistan or Iraq are particularly prominent. Security authorities have been aware of this pattern for years. Suspect rate data show striking differences in some cases. Pretending that this has nothing to do with migration policy in recent years amounts to ignoring reality.
No one becomes an offender solely because of a passport. Crime always has multiple causes, including age, gender, social environment, lack of prospects and prior exposure to violence. Yet that is precisely why the connection is sensitive. Germany has admitted large numbers of young men from patriarchal and Islamic-influenced societies, often shaped by violence, without enforcing integration, cultural adaptation and oversight with sufficient firmness.
Tougher Penalties Alone Not Enough
The federal government is now responding with stricter laws. Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig (SPD) announced tougher penalties for gang rape, offences involving incapacitating substances and rape resulting in pregnancy. That is overdue but addresses only symptoms. It does not prevent a crime.
The underlying problem runs deeper: a perceived loss of state control. In recent years, Germany convinced itself that migration could be managed without openly addressing cultural conflicts, perverse incentives and security consequences. That was a serious mistake.
Too many authorities are overstretched. Proceedings take too long. Deportations fail even for repeat offenders without the right to remain. Police have warned for years about hotspots, parallel milieus and imported patterns of violence. Yet the issue has often been politically sidelined, partly out of fear of moral backlash. In the case of sexual offences, that is particularly consequential. Offenders who perceive a weak state calculate differently. Victims who feel unprotected lose trust in the rule of law.
Germany therefore needs not only tougher penalties but a fundamental change of course: consistent prosecution, rapid victim protection, significantly greater police presence, faster proceedings, consistent deportation of criminal foreign nationals without residency rights and greater candour in migration policy. The real scandal is not that the figures are now becoming known. The real scandal is that for so long it was suggested they had nothing to do with political decisions.