What's behind the rising demand for crime scene cleanup services?
What's behind the rising demand for crime scene cleanup services?
National safety statistics are pointing towards something unexpected in 2026. If you only looked at the headlines, you’d think the country was more dangerous than ever, but the data tells a different story: Violent crime in the U.S. has been on a steady, multi-decade slide. In fact, FBI reports show that Part I offenses—the most serious crimes—are at their lowest point in over 50 years.
But here’s the strange part. Even though crime is down, the demand for specialized biohazard remediation (the industry once called "crime scene cleanup") is actually going up. The National Crime Victimization Survey is blunt about the trend: Violent crime dropped from 37.5 victims per 1,000 back in 2000 to just 23.3 in 2024. Despite that, the global niche market for professional cleanup was valued at roughly $65 million in 2025 and is projected to hit $100 million by the end of the decade. It’s not a mistake in the data; it’s a sign that our standards for what happens after an emergency have fundamentally changed.
Crime Stats and Cleanup Demand
The reason this industry is booming while crime is dipping is simple: We’ve moved from "informal" cleanup to "certified" remediation. Go back to the turn of the millennium, and you’d find property owners or basic janitorial crews scrubbing down scenes themselves. Today, that’s just not an option. Bio-One reports that the demand isn't coming from more crime—it’s coming from a push for technical expertise and staying on the right side of the law.
Take OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910.1030, for example. It sets strict rules for handling bloodborne pathogens like HIV or hepatitis B. To stay compliant, you need specialized services that use industrial PPE and EPA-registered decontaminants that your average cleaning service wouldn't even have in the van.
A big part of this shift is about legal liability, too. Missing a single OSHA standard can lead to fines or even civil lawsuits. That’s why remediation is now viewed as a risk-management strategy. By hiring a pro, managers get a "Certificate of Treatment"—basically a paper trail that proves to insurance companies and health inspectors that the room is 100% safe to step back into.
The Community Benefits of Crime Scene Cleanup
Regulatory pressure isn’t the only growth driver. Since 2000, the industry has scaled because full remediation now demands a level of expertise that general janitorial services can’t provide.
Even in cases where crimes occur on or in business premises, expert cleanup teams are often better equipped than in-house janitorial staff or contracted general cleaners. Employees of crime-scene and biohazard-focused cleanup services also benefit from the training and support needed to address the mental health implications of this work.
The technical precision of modern remediation extends to cleaning porous surfaces or structural elements such as subflooring and drywall, where biofluids can settle and create long-term health hazards.
Biohazard specialists often look beyond standard ATP testing. These swabs react to all organic matter, making them prone to false positives in remediation settings. Instead, professionals rely on multi-stage decontamination and strict visual clearance to verify a site’s safety.
Expected Specialist Cleaning Market Maturity
Data from IntelMarket Research indicates that crime scene cleanup and restoration will increase by only 2%-3% annually over the next five years.
Data from Grand View Research indicates that the home decontamination and biohazard cleaning segment is projected to grow at an annual rate of 9.5% through 2030. That’s why companies in this sector tend to cover the broader needs of clients, rather than only taking on projects related to violent crime.
This market maturity is also defined by the industry's pivot into ancillary biohazard services. While violent crime remains the historical ‘face’ of the industry, a significant portion of current growth comes from addressing the ‘loneliness epidemic’ through hoarding remediation and unattended death services.
These scenarios require the same specialized PPE and advanced remediation techniques as a crime scene but demand a different set of empathetic communication skills. By diversifying into these high-demand niches, the industry has decoupled its financial success from crime rates, ensuring a stable trajectory even as national safety statistics improve.
Even so, there are community and public health benefits associated with biohazard cleanup. As the market matures, the outcomes it delivers are helpful to all.
This story was produced by Bio-One and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.