1. Main points
The Crime Survey for England and Wales estimated that 2.1 million people aged 16 years and over (1.4 million women and 751,000 men) experienced domestic abuse in the year ending March 2023.
There was no significant change in the prevalence of domestic abuse experienced in the last year compared with the previous year.
The police recorded 889,918 domestic abuse-related crimes (excluding Devon and Cornwall) in the year ending March 2023, a similar number to the previous year.
There were 51,288 domestic abuse-related prosecutions in England and Wales for the year ending March 2023, compared with 53,207 in the year ending March 2022.
2. Explore the latest domestic abuse data
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3. Other pages in this release
Domestic abuse prevalence and trends, England and Wales: year ending March 2023
Domestic abuse victim characteristics, England and Wales: year ending March 2023
Partner abuse in detail, England and Wales: year ending March 2023
Domestic abuse and the criminal justice system, England and Wales: November 2023
Redevelopment of domestic abuse statistics: research update November 2023
How domestic abuse data are captured through the criminal justice system
This release supports the United Nations (UN) 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence Campaign and the statistics are used to monitor progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Back to table of contents4. Glossary
Charging rate
The charging rate is the number of suspects of Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) domestic abuse-flagged cases that were charged as a proportion of all those that resulted in a legal decision to charge, take no further action, or recommend an out-of-court disposal.
Convictions
Cases where the defendant was convicted following a prosecution, comprising of either:
a conviction after trial: cases in which the defendant pleaded not guilty, but was convicted after the evidence was heard
a guilty plea: where the defendant pleaded guilty
a proof in absence: cases comprising of lesser offences which were heard by the court in the absence of the defendant
Domestic abuse
Domestic abuse is not limited to physical violence and can include a range of abusive behaviours. It can also be experienced as repeated patterns of abusive behaviour to maintain power and control in a relationship. The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 defines domestic abuse as any incident or pattern of incidents between those aged 16 years and over who:
are a partner
are an ex-partner
are a relative
have, or there has been a time when they each have had, a parental relationship in relation to the same child
The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 outlines the following behaviours as abuse:
physical or sexual abuse
violent or threatening behaviour
controlling or coercive behaviour
economic abuse
psychological, emotional, or other abuse
The Domestic Abuse Act 2021 recognises children under the age of 18 years who see, or hear, or experience the effects of the abuse, as a victim of domestic abuse if they are related or have a parental relationship to the adult victim or perpetrator of the abuse.
Domestic abuse-related crimes
Incidents of domestic abuse that resulted in a crime being recorded by the police and are included in police recorded crime.
Domestic abuse-related incidents
Incidents of domestic abuse that were reported to the police, but following investigation, do not amount to a crime or offence according to the National Crime Recording Standards. These can be added to domestic abuse-related crimes to create a total picture of the demand that domestic abuse puts on the police.
Police recorded crime
Police recorded crime data are supplied by the Home Office, who are responsible for the collation of recorded crime data supplied by the 43 territorial police forces of England and Wales, plus the British Transport Police. The data are an important indicator of police workload but, unlike the CSEW, do not include crimes that have not been reported to the police or incidents that the police decide not to record as crimes.
Pre-charge decisions
Of all the suspects referred by the police, pre-charge decisions are those where the CPS has completed making a decision on whether to charge, take no further action, recommend an out of court decision, record an outcome of pending response – further investigation or “other”.
Prosecutions
All cases where the defendant (or defendants) were charged, summonsed in court, or charged by way of a postal requisition during the period. This includes those proceeding to a trial or guilty plea, those discontinued and those which could not proceed.
Back to table of contents5. Measuring the data
The domestic abuse data included in this release are sourced from the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW), police recorded crime, other government organisations and domestic abuse services.
The User guide to crime statistics for England and Wales provides detailed information about the crime survey and police recorded crime data.
More quality and methodology information on strengths, limitations, appropriate uses, and how the data were created is available in:
our Domestic abuse Quality and Methodology Information (QMI)
our How domestic abuse data are captured through the criminal justice system article
6. Strengths and limitations
Domestic abuse statistics are produced separately by a number of different organisations in England and Wales. When taken in isolation, these statistics may not provide the context required to understand the national and local picture of domestic abuse.
The Crime Survey for England Wales (CSEW) statistics presented in this release for the year ending March 2023 are not badged as National Statistics. They are based on eight months of data collection because of an error in the survey, which resulted in missing data. Caution should be taken when using these data because of the impact of the reduced data collection period on the quality of the estimates.
Police recorded crime and outcomes data from the Home Office are classified as official statistics. All other data included in this release are sourced from administrative datasets that do not fall within the scope of official statistics.
The way in which data on domestic abuse are collected differs between sources. Data are not directly comparable, since they are collected on different bases (for example, victims, crimes, suspects, or defendants) and may not cover the same cohort because of variation in the time taken for cases to progress through the criminal justice system. It is necessary to look at the data presented in its entirety as each individual stage of the system is, in part, influenced by activity at a prior stage.
Back to table of contents8. Cite this statistical bulletin
Office for National Statistics (ONS), released 24 November 2023, ONS website, statistical bulletin, Domestic abuse in England and Wales overview: November 2023