Youth Courts caseload rises to five-year high amid new approach focused on underlying issues

Youth Courts caseload rises to five-year high amid new approach focused on underlying issues


SINGAPORE – The Youth Courts, which handle legal cases involving those under 18, saw their caseload hit a five-year high of 1,324 cases in 2025.

This was a 50 per cent jump from the 882 cases in 2024, and surpassed the previous five-year high of 1,285 cases in 2021.

The Singapore Courts released these latest figures on March 13, the same day Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon officially launched a new approach to handling Youth Courts cases at the Family Justice Courts’ (FJC) annual workplan event.

The therapeutic justice model focuses on addressing the child’s underlying issues and strengthening family relationships, instead of the prior more adversarial approach.

The Youth Courts handles three types of cases: those of youth offenders; family guidance orders for parents who need help dealing with children in persistent conflict with them and the authorities; and care and protection orders for abused or neglected children.

Official figures showed there were 981 charges filed in youth offender cases in 2025, about 40 per cent higher than the 695 charges in 2021.

Lawyers told The Straits Times that higher numbers do not necessarily mean a rise in youth offending, but may reflect the evolving nature of digital crimes, where one incident can result in multiple offences.

Mr James Gomez from Edmond Pereira Law Corp said he has seen more online posts promising fast cash, which draw young people into scams and money mule activities.

“What may begin as a single decision can quickly escalate into multiple acts, each constituting a separate charge,” he said.

For example, a youth who sells a bank account that is later used by criminals to launder scam proceeds could face two charges: cheating the bank and money laundering.

In February, Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam told Parliament that the 36.2 per cent increase in young inmates in prisons here between 2024 and 2025 was largely driven by incarcerations for commercial crimes, such as unlicensed moneylending and money mule offences. These offenders are aged 16 to 21.



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