Iran more than doubled executions in 2025 as global use of the death penalty hit 44-year high, report says By

While Iran’s recorded use of the death penalty far outpaced those of other countries with definitive numbers listed in the report, several had notably higher figures last year than in previous years. Saudi Arabia’s executions in 2025 exceeded what was a record high set in 2024, as the country has increasingly sentenced people to death for drug-related offenses, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, a U.S.-based research organization that provides data on capital punishment.
Meanwhile, according to Amnesty International, executions nearly tripled in Kuwait between 2024 and 2025, and nearly doubled in Egypt, Singapore and the U.S., which had its busiest year for the death penalty since 2009. Experts told CBS News in November that the reasons for such a steep uptick within the U.S. were multifaceted, but that it was at least partly driven by political pressure.
Japan, South Sudan, Taiwan and the UAE all resumed executions last year, contributing to the higher global total.
“This alarming spike in the use of the death penalty is due to a small, isolated group of states willing to carry out executions at all costs, despite the continued global trend towards abolition,” Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s secretary general, said in a statement. “From China, Iran, North Korea and Saudi Arabia to Yemen, Kuwait, Singapore and the USA, this shameless minority are weaponizing the death penalty to instill fear, crush dissent and show the strength state institutions have over disadvantaged people and marginalized communities.”
Polling data indicates that regional views on the death penalty vary widely, although surveys conducted in the U.S., the United Kingdom and parts of Europe indicate declining support in recent decades. As of 2026, more than 70% of countries around the world have abolished capital punishment either legally or in practice, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
Iran more than doubled executions in 2025 as global use of the death penalty hit 44-year high, repor









