Prison population climbs to six-month high despite early-release scheme
The prison population hit 87,556 on Monday, according to new data published by the Ministry of Justice.

The number of prisoners in England and Wales has reached a six-month high, despite thousands of inmates being released early to tackle overcrowding, new figures reveal.
The prison population stood at 87,556 as of Monday, according to new data published by the Ministry of Justice (MoJ).
This is the highest weekly figure since the population climbed to a record 88,521 on September 6 last year, just days ahead of the first wave of early releases.
Further releases of small numbers of prisoners through November and December meant the overall total fell by nearly 3,000 between the September 6 peak and the end of 2024, when it stood at 85,618.
But since the start of 2025, the number has been on an upwards trend and has grown by 1,938 – reversing roughly two-thirds of the drop.
The latest figures show the operational capacity for men and women’s prisons in England and Wales currently stands at 88,771, indicating there are 1,284 spaces available for criminals.
Ministers have promised to find a total of 14,000 cell spaces in jails by 2031.
It comes as MPs on the Public Accounts Committee said the system faces “total gridlock” as the MoJ forecast prisons to run out of space again in early 2026.
The committee also warned on Friday that the prison and probation service was “entirely reliant” on “uncertain” future measures to prevent it running out of places which it hopes will come from the independent sentencing review expected to be published in the spring.
“It could not be clearer that further action is necessary.
“Ministers have acknowledged that they cannot build their way out of this crisis. We must send fewer people to prison, curb the use of recall after release, and prioritise delivering an effective and responsive probation service that works to cut crime in the community.”
The Ministry of Justice has been contacted for comment.