❓WHAT HAPPENED: The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), which operates the Washington, D.C. area Metro subway and bus system, reported a significant drop in crime rates for 2025, reaching a 25-year low.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), Metro Transit Police Department (MTPD), President Donald J. Trump, and National Guard troops.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The report was discussed at a board meeting on January 15, 2026, covering the year 2025.
🎯IMPACT: A crackdown on fare evasion and increased enforcement contributed to a safer Metro system, enabled in large part by President Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, D.C.
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), which operates the Washington, D.C. area Metro subway and bus system, has announced that 2025 marked the lowest crime rate in over two decades. According to data from the Metro Transit Police Department (MTPD), the subway system—which serves D.C., Maryland, and Virginia—saw a 35 percent drop across the board in violent crime and theft last year.
Notably, the dramatic fall in criminality on the Metro system comes as President Donald J. Trump deployed several thousand National Guard troops to the nation’s capital in a major crackdown on crime. These soldiers have been instrumental in deterring crime in high-traffic areas—including Metro stations—allowing Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and the MTPD to focus on crime prevention in areas that previously lacked policing.
At a Thursday meeting of WMATA’s board of directors, MTPD chief Michael Anzallo explained that in 2025, transit police refocused and dedicated new resources to bus policing—an area that had been an ongoing problem for the transit system. Overall, crime on Metrobuses fell 37 percent, while Metrorail saw a 34 percent decline, and crime in Metro parking facilities fell 40 percent.
The decline in criminality on D.C.’s rail and bus system coincides with an overall decline in crime in the city during 2025—again largely attributed to President Trump’s National Guard deployment and crime crackdown. While WMATA’s crime rate has fallen, arrests on the transit system increased by five percent—likely due to increased police presence—and infraction tickets rose by 34 percent as WMATA ramped up fare evasion enforcement.
Join Pulse+ to comment below, and receive exclusive e-mail analyses.