51% of Mayors Say Firearm Crimes Are the Most Common Crimes by Minors in Their Cities

September 25th, 2025 4:49 PM

U.S. mayors cite juvenile crime as the biggest crime problem in their city – and half say firearm crimes are the most common for juveniles – results of a survey conducted by the U.S. Conference of Mayors released Thursday finds.

Fully 44% of the mayors participating in the national survey say crimes involving juveniles represent one of the “biggest crime problems” their city faces, topping all other responses. And, 59% call juvenile crime a serious problem, including more than one in five who rate it a “very serious” problem. Only seven percent say it’s “not serious.”

Because multiple responses to a single question were allowed, the combined percentages of a question’s responses do not total (and far exceed) 100%.

Asked to list the crimes juveniles are most often involved in, more than half cited car theft (54%), followed by firearms (51%). Robbery/theft (15%), assault (8%) and larceny (5%) are among the juvenile crimes less frequently cited.

Asked to name their city’s most effective programs addressing juvenile crime, three-fourths (74%) cited mentoring programs, followed by those providing “violence intervention” (67%).

“What are the biggest crime problems your city currently faces?”

  1. Crimes involving juveniles (under 18): 44%
  2. Shootings: 37%
  3. Homicides: 32%
  4. Robberies: 25%
  5. Gang-related crimes: 14%

“How serious do you consider the juvenile crime problem in your city?”

  • Very Serious: 22.4%
  • Serious: 36.5%
  • Mildly Serious: 35.0%
  • Not Serious: 7.0%

“In what crimes are juveniles most often involved?”:

  1. Car thefts 54%
  2. Firearms 51%
  3. Retail theft 42%
  4. Disturbing the peace 35%
  5. Loitering 21%

“What do you consider to be the most effective programs to reduce juvenile crime in your city?”

  1. Mentoring programs: 74%
  2. Violence intervention programs: 67%
  3. Employment programs: 44%
  4. Sports programs: 44%
  5. Anti-bullying programs: 11%

The survey, conducted September 4-15, reflects the response of mayors from 60 cities in 28 states, disproportionally distributed throughout the U.S. For example, 13 cities of the 60 cities polled are in California. Thus, 22% of the cities surveyed are in a state that is home to only 12% of the nation’s population.