New report shows how the organised crime is changing and effecting EU security - European Commission
Skip to main content
Migration and Home Affairs
  • News article
  • 21 March 2025
  • Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs
  • 1 min read

New report shows how the organised crime is changing and effecting EU security

EU SOCTA visual

Europol published EU Serious and Organised Crime Threat Assessment (EU-SOCTA) 2025, which reveals how crime in the EU is shifting and reshaping the tactics, tools and structures employed by criminal networks.

Based on intelligence from EU countries and international law enforcement partners, the report analyses the current state of organised crime and anticipates future threats to the EU’s internal security. It provides a roadmap for Europe’s law enforcement and policymakers to stay ahead of evolving organised crime.

The fastest-growing threats

The report highlights seven key areas where criminal networks are becoming more sophisticated and dangerous: cyber-attacks, online fraud schemes (increasingly driven by AI), online child sexual exploitation, migrant smuggling, drug trafficking, Firearms trafficking, and environmental crime.

Our security landscape is evolving dramatically. The SOCTA report clearly shows how serious and organised crime - and the threat it poses to our security - is also changing. We need to make every effort to protect the European Union. Our internal security strategy will address these challenges.

Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration, Magnus Brunner

The report also identifies three defining characteristics of today’s serious and organised crime landscape:

Crime is increasingly destabilising

Serious and organised crime is no longer just a threat to public safety, it impacts the foundations of the institutions and society. The effects of the crime can be seen through the laundering or reinvestment of illicit proceeds, corruption, violence and the criminal exploitation of young perpetrators. Criminal networks are also increasingly operating as proxies in the service of hybrid threat actors, a cooperation which is mutually reinforcing.

Crime is nurtured online

Nearly all forms of serious and organised crime have a digital footprint, whether as a tool, target or facilitator. From cyber fraud and ransomware to drug trafficking and money laundering, the internet has become the primary place for organised crime.

Crime is accelerated by AI and emerging technologies

AI is fundamentally reshaping the organised crime landscape. Criminals rapidly exploit new technologies. The same qualities that make AI revolutionary – accessibility, adaptability and sophistication – also make it a powerful tool for criminal networks. These technologies automate and expand criminal operations, making them more scalable and harder to detect.

Find out more

The EU-SOCTA report 2025

Europol EU-SOCTA 2025 Press Conference

Details

Publication date
21 March 2025
Author
Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs