In 2025, Spain faces a dual challenge: managing the flow of illegal immigration, which is putting particular pressure on the Mediterranean coast, and ensuring public safety in the face of the persistent increase in property crimes, particularly theft.

Official statistics show progress in some areas, but also reflect the need for more comprehensive policies.

Journalist asks the witness of a deadly robbery
What do you attribute so much insecurity to?
I don’t know if this can be said on TV. There’s too much illegal immigration, people who don’t come to work and the government lets them in. And we suffer from it, the ones in the government are well protected

Illegal immigration: trends and management

According to Eurostat, Spain issued 14,545 departure orders for illegal immigrants in the second quarter of 2025, one of the highest figures in the European Union. This figure reflects the administrative effort in immigration control.

For its part, Frontex reports that during the first two months of 2025, irregular crossings into the EU fell by 25% compared to the previous year, although Mediterranean routes continue to experience peak pressure, especially in the Canary Islands and the Andalusian coast.

The National Institute of Statistics (INE) indicates that Spain’s population will reach 49.1 million in April 2025, with a growing number of foreign nationalities, such as Colombians, Moroccans, and Venezuelans. These data confirm that immigration is a structural factor in Spanish demographics.

Theft and robbery: the great urban concern

The Ministry of the Interior published in its Crime Report for the second quarter of 2025 that theft totaled 310,289 cases so far this year, consolidating its position as the most common crime.

Although some crimes, such as home burglaries, show year-on-year declines (-11% in one quarter), robberies involving violence and intimidation continue to cause alarm in large cities and tourist areas.

Madrid and Barcelona account for a significant portion of the incidents, largely due to their population density and the influx of tourists, who are frequent victims of theft.

Is there a relationship between immigration and crime?

A recurring debate is whether the rise in illegal immigration directly drives the rise in property crime. However, official statistics do not allow for a straightforward conclusion.

The INE (National Institute of Statistics and Census) and the Ministry of the Interior publish data by nationality of convicted persons, but factors such as youth unemployment, organized gang activity, mass tourism, and urban dynamics significantly influence crime rates.

In other words, blaming illegal immigration alone would be oversimplifying a much more complex phenomenon.

Necessary solutions: beyond repression

To address this dual problem, several experts point out that Spain needs a comprehensive approach that combines:

1. Targeted police reinforcement: Increase presence in areas with a high incidence of theft and robbery, especially in tourist areas and urban centers.

2. More flexible international cooperation: consolidate bilateral agreements for the rapid and effective return of illegal immigrants.

3. Integration and employment programs: Offering employment and educational alternatives to legal migrants, reducing the risk of some ending up in informal economies or criminal networks.

4. More agile justice: speed up judicial proceedings for repeat crimes such as theft, which often overwhelm the criminal justice system.

5. Community prevention: Promote citizen participation in neighborhood watch programs and awareness campaigns to reduce opportunities for crime.

Spain deserves security and order. Illegal and uncontrolled immigration facilitates the entry of crime, allowing repeat offender profiles, especially from the Maghreb, to take advantage of the lack of border controls. It is essential to strengthen immigration laws, reinforce borders, and prioritize citizen safety with firm and decisive measures before the problem becomes irreversible.

Spain needs to find a balance between security and human rights. It cannot be denied that illegal immigration creates tensions and logistical challenges, nor that property crimes seriously undermine social trust.

However, reducing both problems solely to police repression and deportations will not be enough. The country must implement policies that combine effective border control with real integration pathways.

At the same time, it is essential to strengthen the rule of law, combat recidivism, and protect citizens from insecurity.

In short, Spain faces a complex but not insurmountable challenge in 2025: with data in hand, the solution lies in combining firmness, international cooperation, and a commitment to social integration that reduces the vulnerability of both migrants and victims of crime.

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