IOPC publishes figures on police complaints made in 2021/22

17 Nov 2022 12:50 PM

The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) today published its annual report on police complaints for England and Wales in 2021/22.

From February 2020, significant changes were made to the complaints system including widening the definition of a complaint to “any dissatisfaction with the police service”. As a result, more complaints will be logged than in previous years.

The system also allows for more complaints to be handled informally, where appropriate, such as by an apology or explanation. A person can request a review if they are unhappy with the way their complaint was handled. 

As the new system is still being embedded across police forces, the data should be treated as experimental to acknowledge it is still in the testing phase and comparisons with last year or the years before the system changed should be treated with caution.  

A police complaint is an expression of dissatisfaction by a member of the public about the service they have received from a police force. All expressions of dissatisfaction must be logged.  Police forces and local policing bodies deal with the majority of complaints. The IOPC sets the standards for complaints handling through its statutory guidance.

The report shows:

Complaints logged and finalised:

Types of complaint:

Complainants and those complained about:

Complaint outcomes (allegations and cases):

Reviews: