Official Statistics

Ad-Hoc Alcohol Monitoring Statistics Publication, Dec 2024

Published 23 December 2024

Applies to England and Wales

Main Points

The table below shows a summary of the number of individuals in England and Wales fitted with an alcohol monitoring device at the end of each quarter over the last year up to 30 September 2024, and the provisional number for 30 November 2024.

Date Individuals fitted with a monitoring device
(round to nearest 100)
31 December 2023 2,800
31 March 2024 2,900
30 June 2024 3,200
30 September 2024 3,400
30 November 2024 (Provisional) 3,800

Around 3,800 individuals were fitted with an alcohol monitoring device at the end of November 2024. This is circa 1,000 more than the number who were fitted with a monitoring device at the end of December 2023.

Of the alcohol devices used to monitor alcohol abstinence and monitoring requirements (AAMR), as of 29 November 2024 the devices did not register a tamper or alcohol alert 97.3% of the days worn since their introduction in October 2020.

Background

Alcohol monitoring was introduced to courts in Wales in October 2020 and went live throughout England on 31 March 2021 to support the new community sentencing option, the Alcohol Abstinence and Monitoring Requirement (AAMR). An AAMR may only be used when sentencing for alcohol-related criminal behaviour and it imposes a total ban on drinking alcohol for up to 120 days. Compliance with the ban is monitored electronically using an alcohol device which continuously monitors for the presence of alcohol via an offender’s sweat. A non-compliant event is constituted as either a confirmed alcohol event or a registered tamper with a device. The compliance rate is a measure of the percentage of compliant days without a registered tamper or alcohol alert across the whole of the AAMR cohort.

Alcohol Monitoring can be imposed by the court as part of a Community Order or Suspended Sentence Order where:

  • the offence, or associated offence, for which the requirement is being imposed, is alcohol related;
  • the individual is not alcohol dependent or has an Alcohol Treatment Requirement (ATR) recommended or in place; and
  • the individual is an adult (18 years or over)

For offenders being released from custody whose offending and risk is alcohol related, an Alcohol Monitoring on Licence (AML) additional licence condition was introduced in Wales in November 2021 and rolled out to England in June 2022. There are two conditions available for AML:

  • requires total abstinence from alcohol, or
  • requires the offender to comply with requirements specified by their supervising officer to address their alcohol needs, this will include limiting alcohol use. Alcohol monitoring cannot be used for those under 18.

Notes

The analysis presented is of unique individuals with at least one live AM order (AAMR or AML) and with an alcohol monitoring device fitted.

The data in this release are compiled from Alcohol Monitoring Services (AMS) contractor data, which in turn are derived from a case management system. Although care is taken when processing and analysing the returns, the detail collected is subject to the inaccuracies inherent.

The contracts to deliver the Electronic Monitoring service have changed suppliers. To ensure the data continue to meet our high accuracy and quality standards during transition, the Electronic Monitoring quarterly publication has been paused until no earlier than Spring 2025. Alcohol Monitoring has not yet migrated to the new supplier, therefore we are able to report on these data with confidence.

Alcohol Compliance figures are as at 29 November 2024. Compliance with AAMR alcohol monitoring is a cumulative measure, calculated as the total number of days in which the devices have not registered a tamper or alcohol alert divided by the total number of days the devices were fitted. These monitoring data are also used to inform supervision for those with an alcohol device for licence conditions (AML). Consumption of alcohol may be allowed for some offenders on AML orders, therefore the compliance methodology used for AAMR reporting does not provide an accurate measure of compliance for this cohort and is not reflected in the compliance statistics.

The numbers included in this release are provisional.

Contact

Press enquiries should be directed to the Ministry of Justice press office.

Other enquiries about these statistics should be directed to the Analysis Directorate at the Ministry of Justice:

Electronic Monitoring Performance and Statistics
Analysis Directorate, Ministry of Justice
10th Floor
102 Petty France
London
SW1H 9AJ

Email: ppas_statistics@justice.gov.uk

© Crown copyright
Produced by the Ministry of Justice

Alternative formats are available on request from ppas_statistics@justice.gov.uk