More than 7,000 shoplifting offences were recorded by police in Cambridgeshire in 2025
Retail theft in Cambridgeshire has soared by 70% in the last four years. Cambridge specifically has one of the highest crime rates in the country for shoplifting, according to data from the Home Office.
Police in Cambridgeshire recorded 6,046 shoplifting crimes in 2022. That figure jumped by around 1,700 offences the following year, and by 1,300 offences again in 2024.
Last year, police recorded 7,358 shoplifting offences, which was similar to 2024 but 70% higher than in 2022, the first full year after lockdown, when remaining Covid-19 restrictions were lifted. The figure was also 60% higher than in 2019, the last full year before the pandemic.
Last year, shoplifting was most evident in Cambridge, where, despite a 15% fall since 2024, police recorded 2,373 offences. In Peterborough, shop theft increased by 14% to 2,379 crimes.
But separate figures show that Cambridge has a far bigger issue with shoplifting. Crime rates are calculated by dividing the number of offences by the population, and are generally considered the fairest way to compare crime across areas of wildly different sizes.
They show that Cambridge has a crime rate of 16 shoplifting offences per 1,000 residents. That’s the second-highest rate in the East of England after Norwich (18 per 1,000 residents), and the 10th highest rate in England and Wales.
Peterborough has the second-highest rate in Cambridgeshire, with 11 crimes per 1,000 residents. That is also the joint fourth-highest in the East of England and the joint 42nd-highest in the country.
You can use our map to check the shoplifting crime rates in your area and compare them to the rest of the country.
A Cambridgeshire Police spokesperson said the force has a ‘dedicated’ officer who works tirelessly across the county, including training shop staff about retail crime and the importance of reporting every incident to the police.
They continued: “These figures give us a reflection of crime in a particular area, and it’s pleasing to see figures for Cambridge and Peterborough illustrating the increased confidence shop staff now have to report incidents. Our crime training with stores means we can now share intelligence, enabling us to make arrests across the county.
“For repeat offenders we are applying for criminal behaviour orders, preventing them from entering areas where they have previously committed crime. The formation of the spree offender teams has also increased the number of positive outcomes for retail crime and is testament to this ongoing good work – they currently have a detection rate of over 80%.
“We take all reports of crime seriously and continue to work tirelessly to keep shoplifting and other retail crime down as much as possible.“
Shoplifting was first described as an “epidemic” in 2023 by Dame Sharon White, the chair of John Lewis Partnership, and since then, crime and its cost to retailers has spiralled. The British Retail Consortium (BRC) said retailers footed an “eye-watering” £4.2 billion bill from crime in 2024, including £2.2bn lost to shoplifting, and £1.8bn spent on crime prevention measures.
Last month, the Crime and Policing Bill became law. The Bill has removed the £200 “low-value” threshold, meaning theft of goods below that value is no longer a summary-only offence dealt with by magistrates, which created a perception that many shoplifters were getting off lightly. The Bill has also created a new standalone offence of assaulting a retail worker.
Andrew Goodacre, CEO of Bira (the British Independent Retailers Association), said: “We need to recognise that real progress has been made over the past 12 months. There has been a better response from police, more arrests, more community officers on the ground, and a much sharper focus on retail crime. That matters, and it should be acknowledged.
“However, the level of crime remains high and unacceptable. Half a million shoplifting offences in a single year is not a figure any of us should be satisfied with. We have to maintain focus and momentum, and we would urge every retailer to remain vigilant and to report every single incident. That reporting culture is what drives the data, and the data is what drives the political will to act.”




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