What percentage of white s people killing white people im 2024

Checked on January 20, 2026
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Executive summary

The sources provided do not contain a clear, authoritative figure for the percentage of killings in 2024 in which both the offender and the victim were White, so an exact percentage cannot be produced from this reporting; the federal crime-reporting landscape for 2024 is incomplete and public summaries focus on aggregate trends and racial victimization rates rather than offender–victim pairings [1] [2]. Available pieces of the puzzle show overall racial disparities in homicide victimization and counts of offenders and victims by race in adjacent years, but none of the supplied documents answer the specific “white-on-white” share for 2024 directly [3] [4] [5].

1. What the question is asking and why it’s not trivial

The user’s question seeks the proportion of homicides in 2024 where both the perpetrator and the victim were White — a precise offender–victim race cross-tabulation that requires incident-level or tabulated supplemental-homicide data rather than headline totals; national summaries like the FBI’s annual “Crime in the Nation” release report totals and trends but do not always publish complete offender-victim pair matrices for the most recent year, and 2024 reporting completeness varies across jurisdictions [1] [2].

2. What the supplied reporting does provide about 2023–2024 homicide race patterns

The sources document racial disparities in homicide victimization and counts: Statista’s compilation shows that in 2023 there were more White offenders reported than Black offenders in datasets of known-race offenders [3], and Statista’s victim table records 7,289 White murder victims in 2023 [4]; Everytown’s city-level analysis using 2024 FBI NIBRS reporting shows White gun-homicide victimization rates around 4.2–4.3 per 100,000 in 2024 while Black rates were substantially higher (about 23.6 per 100,000 in reporting cities), underscoring racial differences in victimization though not offender–victim pairing [5].

3. Key methodological barriers in the public reporting

Two barriers prevent producing the requested percentage from these sources: first, many agencies did not submit full use-of-force and incident-level data consistently for the most recent years, and the FBI’s national releases note varying participation and revisions for recent years [1] [2]; second, the supplied sources emphasize rates by victim race or counts of offenders/victims by race separately rather than the joint distribution (offender race × victim race) required to calculate the percent of killings that were white-on-white [3] [4] [5].

4. How one would compute the percentage if full data were available

To compute the requested percentage one needs the number of homicide incidents in 2024 where the offender was recorded as White and the victim was recorded as White, divided by the total number of reported homicides in 2024; that count typically comes from the FBI’s Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR) or NIBRS incident-level data when agencies submit offender–victim relationship and race variables — but the supplied FBI summary for 2024 and the working papers note incomplete or provisional counts and do not publish that joint tabulation for all reporting jurisdictions in the provided excerpts [1] [2].

5. Contextual takeaways and alternative viewpoints

While the precise white-on-white percentage for 2024 cannot be confirmed from these documents, the broader evidence confirms that homicide victimization and offending are racially patterned — Black Americans experienced much higher homicide victimization rates in recent years compared with White Americans in both national and city reporting [6] [5] — and different sources may emphasize different metrics (offender counts, victimization rates, city vs. national samples), an editorial choice that can obscure exact offender–victim pairings; readers should therefore treat headline racial counts and rates as complementary but not sufficient to answer the specific pairing question without the SHR/NIBRS cross-tabulation [3] [4] [1].

Want to dive deeper?
How many homicides in 2024 had both offender and victim race recorded in FBI NIBRS/SHR data?
What percentage of homicides nationally are intraracial (same-race victim and offender) in recent years according to SHR or NIBRS?
Where can researchers access 2024 incident-level homicide data (SHR/NIBRS) to compute offender–victim race pairings?