Catholic recruitment to the PSNI fell drastically last year, with 2024 marking a record low for the force which replaced the RUC.

Catholic representation among new recruits has been declining in recent years but it can now be revealed that the pattern is getting worse.

A Freedom of Information request obtained by The Irish News shows that Catholics made up 26.8% of new recruits in 2021 and 21.8% of recruits in 2022.

This was followed by an increase in 2023 to 25.6% of new recruits.

However, the figure dipped by 8.5 percentage points in 2024 with Catholics making up just 17.1% of new hires.

In 1999, the Patten Report found that just 8.3% of the RUC was made up of Catholics.

This figure increased after the former police force was disbanded and replaced by the PSNI in 2001 and a 50:50 hiring policy was introduced.

The initiative meant that the PSNI had to recruit a Catholic officer for every Protestant that they recruited – and led to a surge in Catholic recruitment.

However, the 50:50 scheme was disbanded in 2011 following calls from unionist politicians.

The high levels of Catholic recruitment during this era are now reflected on the streets as the PSNI is currently made up of around 32% Catholic officers.

However, the current decline in Catholic recruitment will bring concerns that this percentage will fall as the initial PSNI joiners start to retire.

The recruitment trend is mirrored by those openly identifying as nationalist within the force.

Just 3.8% of new recruits in 2024 openly identified at nationalist – the lowest number since 2020.

Last month, The Irish News revealed that just over one in every five police officers recruited in Northern Ireland in the past five years is from a Catholic background with just 6.8% openly nationalist.

The PSNI recruited 1,377 officers in total between 2020 and the end of March 2025.

Of the officers recruited during that period, 76.3% came from a Protestant background, while just 21.6% from a Catholic background.

The PSNI has been contacted for comment.