In Brazil, 70% of assaults against women in 2025 occurred at home


Over the year, reports of violence averaged 425 per day.
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Data from the 180 hotline for 2025 were released on Wednesday (Apr. 15).
Domestic violence
Of the total 155,111 reports of violence against women, nearly 70 percent of assaults occurred in a domestic setting, with 40.76 percent taking place at the victim’s residence and 28.58 percent in a home shared with the suspect.
The perpetrator’s home accounted for 5.39 percent (8,356) of the reports of violence on the 180 hotline.
Another 4,587 reports (2.96%) involved incidents of violence on public streets.
Reports also extend to the online environment, accounting for 2.96 percent of recorded cases of violence against women. The survey shows that in 2025, two-thirds (66.3%, or 102,770) of the reports were filed by the victims themselves, while another 26,200 (16.9%) were submitted anonymously.
Complaints from third parties, such as family members, friends, and neighbors of the victim, accounted for 16.8 percent (26,033). Another 53 reports were made by the perpetrators themselves.
Pattern of abuse
The data also highlight the persistence of violence against women in Brazil:
- 20.91 percent (32,435) of women report having experienced violence for more than a year;
- 10.15 percent (15,740) of reports indicate abuse that began recently, within the past 30 days.
Regarding the frequency of assaults, 31.86 percent of reports (49,424 cases) involve daily violence.
The report also shows that 8.10 percent of assaults (12,561 cases) occur weekly and 1.82 percent (2,817 cases) monthly.
Another 17.39 percent of victims (26,980) reported occasional assaults, while 10.50 percent (16,288) reported a single incident.
In 25.38 percent of reports (39,367), no information was provided on the frequency of the violence.
Victim profile
Structural violence against women in Brazil disproportionately affects black and brown women, according to data on the race or color of victims in hotline reports.
Black and brown women account for more than 43.16 percent of reported incidents of violence, with 51,907 reports involving brown women (33.46 percent) and 15,046 involving black (9.70 percent).
White women account for about one-third (32.54 percent) of the reports recorded by 180 hotline, with a total of 50,474 cases.
Asian women appear in 807 reports (0.52%), and indigenous women in 488 cases (0.31%).
In 36,389 cases (23.45%), no information on race or ethnicity was provided.
Age group
Although violence against women affects all age groups, the data indicate a peak in vulnerability among women aged 26 to 44. This group accounts for 57,673 cases, equivalent to 37.19 percent of all reports.
The highest incidence occurs among victims aged 40 to 44, with 15,117 reports (9.75%).
Among those affected, women aged 35 to 39 accounted for 14,594 cases (9.41%), followed by those aged 30 to 34, with 14,173 reports (9.14%), and those aged 26 to 29, with 13,789 cases (8.89%).
Types of violence
The Brazilian government notes that, under the methodology of the women’s assistance hotline, a single report may involve more than one type of violence, which increases the total number of cases recorded, as a woman may be subjected to multiple forms of abuse by the same perpetrator.
Among the most common forms of violence, psychological violence tops the list, accounting for nearly half of all reported cases, with more than 339,000 incidents (49.9%). Physical violence follows, with more than 104,000 incidents (15.3%).
The report also details other serious forms of violence during the period:
- property-related violence, with 36,938 cases (5.4%);
- sexual violence, with 20,534 reports (3.0%), of which 8,172 were classified as sexual harassment (1.2%);
- kidnapping or unlawful detention, with 2,621 cases (0.4 %).
Vicarious violence
Data from the 180 hotline reveal that, in 2025, 7,064 reports of vicarious violence were recorded, representing 4.55 percent of the total 155,111 reports.
This practice occurs when an abuser uses children, relatives, or close associates to inflict psychological suffering on the woman.
In April this year, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed into law a bill that classifies vicarious violence as a form of domestic and family violence and includes it in the list of heinous crimes, punishable by up to 40 years in prison.



































