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The Exodus Road • 2025 Report

2025 Impact

A year of freedom, justice, and hope restored.

Explore the Data

All-Time Organizational Impact

2025 data contributes to these cumulative results

6,282

Children, Women,
and Men Freed

1,971

Traffickers and
Perpetrators Arrested

2,697

Survivors Supported
with Aftercare

63,740

Officers and Citizens
Trained and Educated

Explore 2025 data

2025 At a Glance

The Year in Numbers

Intervention
679
Survivors Freed
262
Traffickers
Arrested
89
Successful
Cases
62
Networks
Dismantled
1,834
Cases
Prevented
Prevention Education
8,120
People Educated
3,151
Officers
Trained
50
Facilitators
Certified
11.9M
Online
Reach
100%
Recommend
Rate
Aftercare
400
Survivors Receiving Ongoing Support After Intervention
484
Therapy
Sessions
33
New
Jobs
11
Businesses
Started

2025 Data & Findings

What Would You Like to Know?

Click a question below to explore our 2025 impact data.

Each number represents a real person who was trapped in exploitation and is now free. Our intervention teams work alongside law enforcement to gather evidence, build cases, and support operations that bring survivors to safety.

By Gender
429
Women & Girls
167
Men & Boys
41
Gender
Non-Conforming

While women and girls remain disproportionately affected, trafficking impacts people of all genders. Male survivors are often underidentified globally, due to stigma and misconceptions about who can be trafficked.

By Age
503
Adults (18+)
134
Minors

Nearly 1 in 5 survivors freed this year by our teams were children. Minors are especially vulnerable to traffickers who exploit their need for safety, belonging, and financial stability.

*Gender and age was not always reported/collected

By Type
76
Sex Trafficking Cases
33
Labor Trafficking Cases

Sex trafficking involves exploitation through commercial sex acts. Labor trafficking forces victims to work in industries like agriculture, manufacturing, or domestic service under coercion, threat, debt bondage, or deception.

Arrests are just the beginning. Our teams' work gathering intelligence helps to ensure traffickers face prosecution and that criminal networks are dismantled, not just disrupted. Every arrest creates a ripple effect, preventing future crime and protecting potential victims.

By Gender
139
Males
100
Females
5
Gender
Non-Conforming

Traffickers are not just men. Women often play critical roles in trafficking networks by recruiting victims, managing day-to-day operations, or serving as the public face of seemingly legitimate businesses.

*Gender was not always reported/collected

Networks Dismantled
26
Networks Disrupted
36
Networks Destroyed
131
Known Prosecutions

"Disrupted" means a network's operations were significantly impaired. "Destroyed" means the network can no longer function.

1,834
Estimated trafficking cases prevented through network destruction

When a trafficking network is destroyed, it can't exploit new victims.

Our investigators work only in support and at the request of law enforcement at the local, national, and international levels. We provide intelligence, evidence, and training so police can execute complex operations that free survivors and lead to real convictions.

162
Law Enforcement
Units Partnered
142
Tips, Leads &
Target Packages
3,151
Officers
Trained

Evidence packages include surveillance data, witness statements, digital forensics, and case documentation that law enforcement needs to make arrests and build prosecutable cases, as determined by their own local jurisdictions.

Technology in Investigations
67%
Cases Used
Social Media Data
24
Cases Supported
by Cyberinvestigators

Traffickers increasingly use social media and online platforms to recruit and advertise victims. Our cyberinvestigators specialize in tracking digital footprints and gathering online evidence.

Education is prevention. By educating at-risk people groups, especially young people, about human trafficking signs and ways to stay safe, we stop trafficking before it starts. We are also training anti-trafficking professionals to recognize signs and take action relative to their profession.

50
Facilitators
Trained
11.9M
Online
Reach
100%
Recommend
Rate
Influenced™ Digital Safety

Influenced™ teaches middle and high school students, as well as the adults caring for them, to navigate online spaces safely, recognize manipulation tactics, and protect themselves and children from online exploitation and human trafficking.

126%
Growth in Confidence
Responding to Cyberbullying
2X
Growth in Recognizing
Online Exploitation
92%
Students Now Identify
Unsafe Online Situations
92%
Parents Would Respond
Proactively to Cyberbullying

Through our Influenced™ program, we train local facilitators to deliver our curriculum in their own communities, creating sustainable prevention education that continues without our direct involvement in facilitation.

Freedom is just the beginning. Survivors face a long journey of healing — from immediate safety needs to processing trauma to rebuilding an independent life. Our aftercare programs walk alongside survivors through every phase.

Phase 1: Post-Intervention

In the critical first days and weeks after being freed, survivors need safe housing, medical care, and basic necessities. We prioritize family reunification when safe, or provide residential care when it's not.

65
Supported in Home
Environments
14
Full-Time
Residential Care
Phase 2: Long-Term Care

Trauma doesn't heal overnight. This phase focuses on mental health treatment, legal advocacy, and addressing the complex challenges survivors face — including PTSD, addiction, and navigating legal systems.

484
Therapy
Sessions
197
Casework Support
in Legal Process
68
Reduced PTSD
Symptoms
32
Addiction
Support
Phase 3: Reintegration

The ultimate goal is independence. We help survivors gain education, job skills, and financial literacy so they can build sustainable lives free from vulnerability to re-trafficking.

29
Enrolled in Job &
Education Programs
33
In Internship
or New Job
11
Started Own
Business
82%
Improving in
Financial Management
126
Improved Ability to
Protect Themselves

Trafficking victims don't fit a single profile. They come from every background, nationality, and walk of life. What they share is vulnerability — economic hardship, family instability, or simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

By Gender
429
Women & Girls
167
Men & Boys
41
Gender
Non-Conforming
By Age
503
Adults (18+)
134
Minors (under 18)

Children are targeted because they're easier to manipulate and control. Traffickers exploit their need for love, security, and belonging — often posing as romantic partners, mentors, or providers.

By Exploitation Type
76
Sex Trafficking Cases
33
Labor Trafficking Cases

*Gender and age was not always reported/collected

Traffickers aren't always strangers in dark alleys. They can be family members, romantic partners, employers, or online acquaintances. They're skilled manipulators who identify and exploit vulnerability.

By Gender
139
Males
100
Females
5
Gender
Non-Conforming

Nearly 40% of arrested traffickers in 2025 were women. Female traffickers often recruit victims — sometimes having been victims themselves — because they can more easily build trust with potential targets.

*Gender was not always reported/collected

How They Recruit

Traffickers use different tactics depending on their target's vulnerabilities. These are the most common methods we observed in 2025 cases:

01 False job promise — offering work that doesn't exist or misrepresenting conditions
02 Social media — building relationships online before exploitation
03 Violence, threats, or kidnapping — force used from the start
04 Grooming — gradual manipulation, often targeting youth
05 Relationship or marriage — romantic manipulation or sham marriages

Recovery isn't linear — it's a journey that looks different for every survivor. Our three-phase approach meets survivors where they are and provides support for as long as they need it.

Phase 1: Post-Intervention

Immediately after being freed, survivors need safety, medical attention, and basic necessities. We work quickly to place them in appropriate care — ideally with family when it's safe to do so.

65
Supported in Home
Environments
14
Full-Time
Residential Care
Phase 2: Long-Term Care

Healing from trafficking takes time. This phase provides ongoing mental health support, legal assistance, and help addressing the complex trauma survivors carry.

484
Therapy
Sessions
197
Casework Support
in Legal Process
68
Reduced PTSD
Symptoms
32
Addiction
Support
Phase 3: Reintegration

True freedom means having the skills and resources to build an independent life. We invest in education, job training, and financial literacy to break the cycle of vulnerability.

29
Enrolled in Job &
Education Programs
33
In Internship
or New Job
11
Started Own
Business
82%
Improving in
Financial Management
126
Improved Ability to
Protect Themselves
3
Survivors Graduating from Long-Term Residential Care

Human trafficking is the exploitation of people through force, fraud, or coercion for labor, sexual exploitation, or other forms of abuse. It's modern-day slavery — and it happens in every country, including the United States.

Two Main Types
76
Sex Trafficking
Cases in 2025
33
Labor Trafficking
Cases in 2025

Sex trafficking involves commercial sex acts induced by force, fraud, or coercion — or any commercial sex act involving a minor. Labor trafficking forces victims to work in industries like agriculture, construction, domestic service, or manufacturing under threat or debt bondage.

Where It Happens
61
Intra-National Cases
(within one country)
28
Trans-National Cases
(across borders)

Contrary to popular belief, most trafficking doesn't involve crossing international borders. The majority of victims are exploited in their own countries — sometimes in their own communities.

Traffickers are skilled at identifying vulnerability. They target people facing economic hardship, family instability, or emotional needs — then use manipulation tactics to gain trust before exploitation begins.

Top Recruitment Methods

These are the most common tactics we observed in 2025 cases. Often, traffickers combine multiple methods to control their victims.

01 False job promise — offering work that doesn't exist or misrepresenting conditions
02 Social media — building relationships through Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, or dating apps
03 Violence, threats, or kidnapping — using force from the beginning
04 Grooming — gradually building trust and dependence, especially with minors
05 Relationship or marriage — romantic manipulation or fraudulent marriages

The rise of social media has transformed trafficking. Two-thirds of our 2025 cases involved online recruitment — making digital safety education more critical than ever.

Human trafficking happens everywhere — in every country, every state, every community. It's not just a problem "over there." It happens in suburban neighborhoods, rural towns, and major cities alike.

2025 Case Geography
61
Intra-National Cases
(within one country)
28
Trans-National Cases
(across borders)

Most people assume trafficking means smuggling people across borders. In reality, the majority of victims are exploited without ever crossing an international line. They're trafficked within their own countries — and sometimes their own communities.

76
Sex Trafficking Cases
33
Labor Trafficking Cases

Our teams in Brazil, Colombia, India, Thailand, the United States, and one other undisclosed Latin American country lead and support work beyond their borders, with successful interventions or cases spanning multiple countries. Trafficking adapts to local contexts, but the exploitation looks similar everywhere.

Arresting individual traffickers is important, but lasting change requires dismantling entire networks. When we destroy a trafficking operation, we don't just free current victims — we prevent future ones.

26
Networks
Disrupted
36
Networks
Destroyed

Disrupted means we significantly impaired operations — key members arrested, infrastructure compromised. Destroyed means the network is permanently shut down — leadership imprisoned, assets seized, operations ended.

131
Known
Prosecutions
262
Perpetrators
Arrested
1,834
Estimated trafficking cases prevented

We calculate prevention impact based on a network's historical activity, average victim throughput, and operational lifespan. A single destroyed network can prevent dozens or even hundreds of future trafficking cases.

Prevention education works on two fronts: teaching young people to protect themselves online, and equipping professionals to recognize and respond to trafficking when they see it.

50
Certified
Facilitators
11.9M
Online Awareness
Reach
3,151
Officers
Trained

We train local facilitators to deliver our curriculum in their own communities. This "train the trainer" model multiplies our impact and creates sustainable prevention education.

Influenced™ Digital Safety

Influenced™ teaches middle and high school students, as well as the adults caring for them, to navigate online spaces safely, recognize manipulation tactics, and protect themselves and children from online exploitation and human trafficking.

126%
Growth in Confidence
Responding to Cyberbullying
2X
Growth in Recognizing
Online Exploitation
92%
Students Now Identify
Unsafe Online Situations
92%
Parents Would Respond
Proactively to Cyberbullying
100%
Would Recommend Influenced™

Through our Influenced™ program, we train local facilitators to deliver our curriculum in their own communities, creating sustainable prevention education that continues without our direct involvement in facilitation.

Yes. Every number on this page represents a real person whose life has changed because of this work. Behind every statistic is a survivor who is now free, a trafficker who can no longer exploit, or a young person who knows how to protect themselves.

2025 Impact
262
Traffickers
Arrested
8,120
People
Educated
400
Receiving Ongoing
Support
1,834
Cases Prevented

When we prevent just one person from being trafficked, we're protecting them from years of exploitation. When we support a survivor through recovery, we're helping them build a life of freedom and dignity.

All-Time Impact

Since our founding, The Exodus Road has worked alongside law enforcement and local partners to achieve lasting change in the fight against human trafficking.

6,282
Survivors
Freed
1,971
Traffickers
Arrested
2,697
Survivors in
Aftercare
63,740
Trained &
Educated

Full Findings

Want the Complete Picture?

Download our comprehensive 2025 Human Trafficking Report for detailed data, methodology, and additional insights from our global operations.

Download Full Report PDF • 2025 Human Trafficking Data & Findings

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Every Number is a Life

Behind each statistic is a survivor freed, a family protected, or a trafficker stopped. Your partnership makes this work possible.

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Stolen Lives: America's Human Trafficking Crisis

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