Murder cases down almost 10%, with majority reported in these four provinces
· Citizen

Murder has claimed the lives of fewer South Africans between January and March this year, while violent crime in general is also down over the three months.
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The South African Police Service (Saps) and the Ministry of Police on Friday released the country’s crime statistics for the fourth quarter of the 2025-26 financial year.
Police Minister Firoz Cachalia confirmed that fewer crimes had been reported in that quarter than in the same period the previous year, but stressed it was still too high.
“The figures that will be presented today are not just numbers. They are a stark mirror held up to our society.
“Behind every statistic is a traumatised victim, a distraught family, a community living in fear,” mused the minister.
Violent crime down
The stats presented reflect the independently assessed figures collected from 1 175 police stations across the country.
Between January and March 2025, 5 727 murder cases were reported, with the number dropping to 5 181 in 2026 – a decrease of 9.5% and a further drop of 20.7% decrease from the same quarter in 2024.
Four out of every five murders occurred in either Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), or the Eastern and Western Cape.
The Eastern Cape had the highest per capita murder rate with 14.3 murders per 100 000 people, with the Western Cape, KZN and Gauteng at 12.8, 8.8 and 7.1, respectively.
Violent crimes, listed as contact crimes, were down 4.6% across the board, featuring a 20.4% decrease in house robberies, 22% decrease in non-residential robberies and 18.3% decrease in business robberies.
Additionally, burglary, motor vehicle theft, stock theft and other property-related crimes were down a combined 8.5%.
Over 9 000 rapes reported
Rape is not counted among contact crimes but falls under sexual offences, with police recording 9 782 rape cases in the space of the three months mentioned.
That number may be down from 11 430 rapes reported between October and December 2025. Cachalia noted that 47% of reported rapes occurred at the home of the victim or perpetrator.
Cachalia said an honest conversation was needed about the role alcohol plays in the commission of violent and sexual crimes.
The acting minister said a combined 7 267 murder, rape, attempted murder and serious assault cases reported were alcohol-related.
“We must address the toxic role of alcohol abuse and violence. The more alcohol we consume, the more violence we will suffer,” said Cachalia.
He said he had requested the Civilian Secretariat for Police to scrutinise liquor-related regulations, specifically the trading hours of liquor outlets.
Cachalia reminded the public that these quarterly briefings were not a “ritual”, but a yardstick used to plot a way forward.
“By better understanding the trends, patterns and factors driving crime and violence in your provinces and communities, better crime prevention plans can be developed and implemented.
“These figures tell a complex story: one of progress that is real and measurable, but also that we continue to be challenged by deep‑rooted violence and organised criminality that threaten our people and our democracy,” said Cachalia