Retail Crime: The Hidden Trends Behind the Numbers

Is Retail Crime Really Falling Or Are Shops Reporting Less? The Hidden Trends Behind the Numbers

Recent retail‑crime figures suggest a welcome decline in violence and abuse against shopworkers but beneath the headlines lies a more complicated truth. While industry reports show certain types of crime dropping, theft remains widespread, under‑reporting appears to be growing, and new trends such as “chocolate theft to order”are emerging as organised criminal gangs shift tactics.

Understanding whether crime is truly decreasing or simply becoming less visible matters for retailers, policymakers and frontline workers alike.

A Real Reduction in Violence Supported by Investment

The British Retail Consortium (BRC) reports that violence and abuse against retail workers fell by a fifth, from around 2,000 incidents per day to 1,600 between 2023/24 and 2024/25. Retailers attribute this improvement to more than £5bn in security investment, including CCTV upgrades, body‑worn cameras and stronger collaboration with police.

While this is encouraging, it follows a period in which violence surged to record levels. Even after the fall, incidents remain far above pre‑pandemic baselines, suggesting progress but not resolution.

Nationally, crime trends from the Crime Survey for England and Wales show a general long‑term decrease across several categories, supporting the idea that some reductions are genuine.

However Theft Remains High and Much of It Goes Unreported

Even as violence shows improvement, theft continues to burden retailers heavily. The latest BRC and Sensormatic figures estimate around 7 million theft‑related incidents in 2024/25, including 5.5 million shoplifting cases costing approximately £408m, plus 1.5 million incidents of delivery theft.

Earlier data highlights the wider scale of the issue, with over 20 million theft incidents reported in 2023/24, showing that even a 20% drop still leaves theft at historically high levels.

Low confidence in enforcement plays a major role. Around 61% of retailers rate police response as ‘poor’ or ‘very poor’, reinforcing a belief that reporting achieves little.

This fuels a cycle of under‑reporting as retailers focus on major or violent incidents while absorbing lower‑level losses internally. Workers, too, may avoid reporting due to fatigue, fear of confrontation, or doubt that anything will change.

BBC Reports Reveal a New Trend: Chocolate Theft “to Order”

One of the most striking developments is the rise of chocolate as a high‑value theft target, widely reported by the BBC. Shops including Sainsbury’s and Tesco are now locking up £2.60 bars of Cadbury Dairy Milk in plastic security boxes as thieves increasingly steal chocolate to order for resale through illicit markets.

Police forces from West Midlands to Wiltshire have shared CCTV footage showing entire shelves or trays of chocolate being taken in coordinated grabs, while Cambridgeshire Police reported arrests involving coats stuffed with Creme Eggs.

The Association of Convenience Stores warns that chocolate is now being targeted by prolific offenders and criminal networks, not casual opportunists. Some retailers report losses exceeding £250,000 a year from chocolate alone.

This trend illustrates how organised retail crime adapts quickly, targeting items that are high‑value, easily resold, and unlikely to trigger urgent police action.

A Growing Tolerance Threshold?

For many retailers, the combination of relentless theft and under‑resourced policing has created a de‑facto tolerance threshold. This includes:

  • Accepting certain types of theft as an unavoidable cost
  • Prioritising only high‑value or high‑risk incidents for reporting
  • Reducing stock on shelves or placing products behind staff‑assisted security boxes
  • Relying more on security investment than on police intervention

At the consumer level, research shows the public increasingly believes it is easy to steal from shops, indicating a perception shift that emboldens offenders.

So, Is Retail Crime Really Falling?

The answer is mixed.

Yes, violence appears to be declining in measurable ways, thanks largely to retailer‑driven investment.
No, theft is not meaningfully falling and may be increasingly masked by under‑reporting.
Yes, a tolerance threshold is emerging, reshaping how retailers manage and interpret crime.

The surge in chocolate theft to order highlights how criminal networks are evolving faster than traditional responses. The headline figures may show improvement, but the lived reality in stores suggests a growing gap between reported and actual crime.

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