Philly homicides dropped to lowest number in decades, police say
Jan 02, 2026
In 2021, as Philadelphia residents averaged nearly 11 homicides per week, residents feared for their lives, some likening the constant gunfire as the Wild Wild West. Now, the city just recorded an average of about four homicides each week, the lowest average since 1966.
“That’s 59 years, whic
h is incredible,” Philadelphia Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel told NBC10. “Absolutely incredible.”
In an interview with the NBC10 Investigators, Bethel detailed how the city accomplished this, , saying it was a process that started as life slowly returned to normal following the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was during that time that the police department began to map out a strategy.
Then in 2023, Cherelle Parker won the Philadelphia mayoral election, in part due to her stance of being tough on crime.
“It starts with leadership,” Bethel said. “With a mayor who comes in saying PIE — prevention, intervention and enforcement.”
Since then, the police department has invested in technology that has helped them clear more cases, according to Bethel.
“We’ve got license plate readers, our forensic unit, really advanced forensics that we have now. That’s been absolutely incredible. The phone technology,” Bethel said. “There used to be a time you couldn’t solve a homicide unless somebody said that person did it. Today, that’s not the case.”
The Philadelphia Police Department now boasts an 82% clearance rate which includes homicides solved from previous years, according to Bethel. Out of the 222 reported Philadelphia homicides in 2025, 144 of them – or more than 60% — were solved by years-end, officials said.
“We’re actually on pace to have the highest clearance rates for murder nationwide since about 2009,” John Shjarback, a criminal justice associate professor at Rowan University, told NBC10.
Shjarback – who studies crime trends — said several other U.S. cities also reported low homicide numbers and improved clearance rates.
“Baltimore, Detroit, San Francisco, Oakland, a number of cities across the country are experiencing these same historic lows since the 1960s and 1970s,” Shjarback said.
According to Shjarback, the lower the number of homicides, the higher the clearance rates tend to be.
“Given caseloads and volume and a lack of backlogging in the cases of detectives, access to the crime lab,” Shjarback said.
Shjarback told NBC10 technology and social service programs can help bring down violence and increase the solve rates.
Philadelphia, for example, has several violence interruption programs.
“That’s going out, knocking on doors and trying to convince young people that they should not engage in that violence and then giving them, not just knocking on the doors, but have a plethora of support,” Bethel said.
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said it’s too soon to tell if the homicides that were cleared in 2025 will end in convictions. So far, he likes what he’s seeing, however.
“The Philadelphia Police Department and its detectives are doing a job that is very impressive and, in my view, better and better when it comes to solving these cases,” Krasner said.
Krasner also said the decrease in homicides has allowed detectives to gather more evidence in the remaining cases.
“It’s that extra layer of evidence that often determines the difference between a successful prosecution and a failure or an arrest and no arrest,” Krasner said.
Bethel, meanwhile, said he hopes to keep the momentum going in 2026.
“I don’t have a brake pad. I have a gas pedal,” Bethel said. “Keep pushing. There’s no brake, right? This is 365 days a year, 24 hours, seven days a week.”
There are additional resources for people or communities that have endured gun violence in Philadelphia. Further information can be found here.
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