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A UK Government announcement from the Ministry of Justice

Almost 79,619 cases. And counting.

The Crown Court backlog has more than doubled since the pandemic. Behind every number is someone waiting for justice.

Since the pandemic, caseload has grown from 38K to 80K.

The backlog is projected to exceed 200,000 by 2035.

Victims and waiting times

The average Crown Court wait for rape victims is 423 days. The average Crown Court wait is over 255 days.

6,000 cases in the backlog have been waiting over two years

2,000 rape cases have been waiting for one year or more

79,619 cases. Still growing.

Justice delayed for thousands. Case files and evidence add to court workload.

Why the backlog keeps growing

Demand is Growing

Cases are arriving faster than they can be processed. Increased police officer recruitment is leading to a higher number of charges for criminal offences, and so there is more work for the criminal courts. Without action the Government projects the backlog could reach over 200,000 by 2035.

Cases Are More Complex

Cases today involve far more evidence — mobile phone downloads, digital material, and DNA analysis. Each case takes longer to prepare and hear.

Courts Running at Full Capacity

Next financial year, there will be no financial limit to the amount of work the Crown Court can take on – we are enabling it to work at its maximum capacity.

£287 million is being invested in the court estate and £126 million more per year in criminal legal aid.

Even with this record investment, the backlog is still projected to reach 113,000 by 2029 and could rise to 174,000 by 2035.

Investment and Reform

With investment and reform, we can stop the open caseload from spiralling and put it on a downward trajectory.

Investment, Reform and Efficiencies

As we also modernise the courts and improve productivity, we hope to see the backlog get back to sustainable levels over the next decade. With efficiencies, we can go further and faster.

Crown Court backlog projection: historical actuals, without extra investment, and with record investment and reforms.
ActualsWithout extra investmentWith record investmentWith record investment and reformsWith record investment, reforms and efficiencies*

*Projection of possible backlog figure if there are efficiency gains of c.5% by 2028/29 and further efficiency gains stabilise at c. 10% in 2030/31.

Efficiency

Alongside investment, we are modernising the criminal courts to bring them into the 21st century.

We are also expanding our in-house Justice AI Unit, a specialist team deployed to our frontline to tackle top challenges, with an additional £12m investment next year.

More money and efficiency measures alone will not be sufficient to allow the system to operate as it should

The Rt Hon Sir Brian Leveson

We also need structural court reform.

Criminal Court Reform

The Criminal Courts, Explained

All criminal cases begin in the magistrates' courts and over 90% are resolved there. These are low-level offences which can only be tried in the magistrates' courts as well as some less serious intermediate cases. Intermediate cases can be tried in either the magistrates' courts or the Crown Court.

The Criminal Courts, Explained

The most serious offences — such as murder, rape and robbery — must be sent to the Crown Court for trial by jury.

Magistrates may send intermediate cases to the Crown Court but defendants can also choose (elect) to have a Crown Court trial by jury for these cases.

The Courts and Tribunals Bill

The Government is bringing forward primary legislation in Parliament — the Courts and Tribunals Bill — to reform the criminal courts. The reforms will mean more cases are heard in the magistrates' courts, where outcomes are up to four times faster. In the Crown Court, reforms will introduce judge-alone trials (without a jury), including a new Swift, Bench Division to hear intermediate cases (with likely sentences up to 3 years). Jury trials in the Crown Court will remain for the most serious crimes. Demand on Crown Court time is projected to drop by almost 20% as a result.

Five reforms. 27,000 sitting days freed up per year.

Investment and reform together turn the tide.

Almost 20% reduction in demand on Crown Court time.

Total Crown Court sitting days freed up per year: 27,000

Only sensible and pragmatic reform — alongside investment and efficiencies — can deliver faster, fairer justice for victims.

With investment and reform, demand on Crown Court time falls within capacity and the backlog is projected to reduce.

Turning the tide

With investment and reform, the Crown Court backlog is projected to stabilise and begin to reduce — 118,000 fewer cases than without action by 2035.

118,000 projected fewer cases vs no action by 2035

Backlog projection: without extra investment (dashed) vs with investment and reform (solid).
Without extra investmentWith record investmentWith record investment and reformsWith record investment, reforms and efficiencies*

*Projection of possible backlog figure if there are efficiency gains of c.5% by 2028/29 and further efficiency gains stabilise at c. 10% in 2030/31.

What this means for victims

Read the full evidence

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