1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
CrimeGermany

Germany: Police chief warns of 'cocaine surge'

Matt Ford with dpa
April 22, 2025

The use of hard drugs including cocaine and heroin is on the rise in Germany, according to the country's police chief, who also believes the partial legalization of cannabis has made the authorities' work harder.

In this handout photo from July, 2019 German customs authorities seize 4.5 tons (nearly 5 US tons) of cocaine in a container shipped in Hamburg, Germany
A top German police official has blamed a saturated US market for the rise of hard drug use in EuropeImage: German Custom/AP Photo/picture alliance

Germany is experiencing a "cocaine surge" amid a more general increase in the use of hard drugs, according to the head of the country's Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA).

"Cocaineis spreading rapidly in Germany," Holger Münch was quoted as saying in comments published by the RND news network on Tuesday.

Münch said that the focus of the international drug trade is switching to Europe because "the market in North America is saturated."

According to Germany's 2024 crime statistics quoted by the DPA news agency, the number of cocaine-related offenses in the country increased by nearly 5% last year.

Münch also warned of changing dynamics in the global heroin market caused by an opium ban imposed by the new Taliban government in Afghanistan.

"This has created a shortage and therefore increased the risk of [heroin being cut with] synthetic opioids, which poses a higher risk for consumers," he explained, highlighting issues caused by fentanyl in the United States, even though heroin-related offenses in Germany were down last year.

95 kilograms of cocaine were discovered in boxes of bananas in Germany's western Rhineland region in SeptemberImage: Polizei Mönchengladbach/dpa//picture alliance

Has Germany's legalization of cannabis made police work harder?

Münch was also unconvinced by the partial legalization of cannabis by Germany's outgoing coalition government. Since April, the cultivation of small amounts of marijuana in specially authorized clubs for personal use has been permitted, while adults are allowed to carry up to 25 grams (just under one ounce) of cannabis on their person in public.

"The cannabis legalization won't have any effect on the black market; these so-called cannabis clubs don't even begin to satisfy the demand," said Münch, who complained that the new legislation has actually made the police's work harder.

"When people can legally carry 25 grams in their pocket, it's more difficult to prove that they're dealing," he said.

In their coalition talks, the incoming Christian Democrat (CDU) and Social Democrat (SPD) coalition government has agreed to evaluate the cannabis legalization in autumn 2025, with the conservative CDU in favor of reversing it altogether.

"The fight against illegal drug dealing must remain at the top of the agenda for the police and the justice system," insisted Münch.

The CDU received the largest share of the vote in Germany's February federal election and is set to be the senior partner in the new two-party coalition government. Party leader Friedrich Merz is likely to be elected chancellor in May.

Edited by: Saim Dušan Inayatullah

While you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW