Domestic Abuse, Football and the Children Caught Between.
As the World Cup 2026 gets under-way, we at Carvers are caught up in the excitement like so many others. But for many people at home, a World Cup can be a time of fear.
Why a major tournament raises the risk at home.
The pattern of domestic abuse around major football tournaments is well documented, and it persists year after year.
Research shows that domestic abuse incidents rise by 38% when England loses, increase by 26% when the team wins, and remain 11% higher the following day, regardless of the result. (Source: Lancaster University study, cited by Crimestoppers, June 2026)
Internationally, police reports of domestic violence rise by up to 33% during major sporting events such as the World Cup, often linked to the social stress, crowding, and alcohol-fuelled environments that surround them. (Source: UNESCO and UN Women, cited by the National Network to End Domestic Violence, June 2026)
Football itself is never the cause. A tournament intensifies abuse that already lives in a home, fuelled by alcohol and social pressure that builds around big games.
This reaches far more households than many people assume, and it reaches men as well as women. The Crime Survey for England and Wales estimated that approximately 3.8 million people aged 16 and over experienced domestic abuse in the year ending March 2025, made up of roughly 2.2 million women and 1.5 million men. (Source: Office for National Statistics, Domestic abuse in England and Wales overview, 2025)
