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Data InsightsHomicide rates in Ecuador have increased steeply in the last few years

Homicide rates in Ecuador have increased steeply in the last few years

This image is a line graph depicting homicide rates in Ecuador from 1990 to 2023, measured as annual deaths from homicide per 100,000 people.

Initially, the graph shows low homicide rates, peaking near 20 per 100,000 around 2010, a time when Ecuador had some of the lowest rates in Latin America. However, there is a noticeable upward trend beginning around 2020, with rates increasing sharply. By 2023, the rate has surged dramatically to 46 per 100,000, indicating a more than fivefold increase from previous levels.

The data source listed at the bottom is the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, dated 2025. The chart is licensed under CC BY for Our World in Data.

For most of the 2010s, Ecuador had some of the lowest murder rates in Latin America. According to data from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, rates were often three or four times lower than the regional average.

But as you can see in the chart, homicide rates have risen steeply in the last few years. From 2020 to 2023, rates increased more than fivefold. To put this in context: the number of people murdered each year increased from roughly 1,400 to 8,200.

Ecuador went from being one of the safest countries in the region to having one of the highest murder rates, not only in Latin America, but in the world as a whole.

This increase in violence has been linked to Ecuador’s growing role in international drug trafficking and competition between criminal groups. Large outbreaks of prison violence, often involving rival gangs, have also contributed.

Estimates of homicide rates can vary between sources; read our explainer on differences between them

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