US suicide rate fell in 2024 after hovering at high level
[December 11, 2025]
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. suicide rate dropped slightly last year from
some of the highest levels ever reported, preliminary data suggests.
Experts say it's hard to know exactly why, or whether the decline will
continue.
A little over 48,800 suicide deaths were reported in 2024, according to
provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
roughly 500 fewer than the year before.
The overall suicide rate fell to 13.7 per 100,000 people.
Suicides rose for nearly two decades aside from a two-year drop around
the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Then they shot up again, to more
than 14 per 100,000 from 2021 to 2023.
Experts caution that suicide — the nation’s 10th leading cause of death
in 2024 — is complicated and that attempts can be driven by a range of
factors. Contributors include higher rates of depression, limited
availability of mental health services and the availability of guns.
About 55% of all suicide deaths involve firearms, according to CDC data.
Rates vary across age groups and locations. For example the suicide rate
for Americans in their late 20s and early 30s fell significantly in
2024, but it remained pretty stable for other age groups. And rates fell
in some states in the South and Midwest but not in the Mountain West.

“There's a lot to dig into as we’re starting to think about what could
be responsible for a potential decline,” said Katherine Keyes, a
Columbia University public health professor who studies suicide.
That includes understanding “whether this is a blip on the radar” or the
start of a prolonged decline, she added.
It has helped that some large health systems — including the one run by
the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — have set up programs to screen
or identify at-risk people, said Dr. Christine Moutier, chief medical
officer of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.
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A man walks along a trail during sunset near Manhattan, Kan., on
Nov. 20, 2015. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
 Another possible contributor is a
3-year-old national crisis line that allows anyone to dial 988 to
reach a mental health specialist. It has a special option for
military veterans, a group at higher risk for suicide.
But the Trump administration decided last summer to eliminate an
option that connected callers with a counselor trained in supporting
LGBTQ+ people under age 25 — another group at higher risk.
“I don’t think it’s a good sign that we’re eliminating programs that
are designed to reach out to the highest-risk individuals,” Keyes
said.
Suicides are often underreported, with some families seeing shame in
having a loved one’s death listed as a suicide, said Alexandra Lord,
a public health historian at the National Museum of American
History, and that likely continues to be true to some extent.
But Moutier said there is less stigma than in the past and people
are more willing to seek out help.
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