Guiney, Ciara (2026) Courts Service annual report, 2024. Drugnet Ireland, Issue 93, February 2026, pp. 24-26.
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The Courts Service Annual Report 2024 was published on 7 July 2025. While the report presented data for all criminal cases arising within the Irish justice system between January and December 2024, this article only reports on statistics related to prosecutions for drug offences.1 The data provided are for overall drug law offences. The Courts Service in Ireland does not distinguish between the different supply offences and possession/use offences (Courts Service, personal communication, 2017).
District Court
In most cases, prosecutions for drug offences are carried out in the District Court, which is the lowest court in the Irish legal system. The District Court, exercising its criminal jurisdiction, deals with four types of offences: summary offences, indictable offences tried summarily, some indictable offences, and indictable offences not tried summarily. When the District Court hears a criminal case, the judge sits without a jury. The District Court judge decides the issues of fact and whether to convict, and also determines the sentence.
In the case of most indictable offences that must be tried by a judge sitting with a jury, the District Court may impose a sentence where the accused pleads guilty, provided that the Director of Public Prosecutions consents and the judge accepts the guilty plea. Otherwise, the accused is sent forward to the Circuit Court on their signed guilty plea for sentencing. The District Court has a limit on the sentence it may impose in respect of a single criminal charge, which is 12 months’ imprisonment.2
Overall, 22,700 orders were made in relation to drug offences in 2024 involving 14,727 defendants, which represents a 7% decrease since 2023 (N=15,858 defendants) (see Table 1 and Table 2).1
Table 1: Number of sentences for drug offences in the District Court, 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
* There may be more than one offence brought against a defendant.
Table 2: Number of summary and indictable offences: outcomes in the District Court, 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
Note: Dis = dismiss; S/O = strike out; TIC = taken into consideration; Disq = disqualified; C/S = community service; Prob = probation; Imp/det = imprisonment or detention; Susp = suspended sentence
Juvenile crime
The age of criminal responsibility in Ireland is 12 years (Section 52 of the Children Act, 2001, as amended by Section 129 of the Criminal Justice Act 2006). Generally, children who come before the courts are aged between 15 and 17 years. The total number of orders that were made in respect of drug offences in the Children Court in 2024 was 577 (see Table 3),1 which represented approximately an 11% increase since 2023 (N=518 orders). In 2024, young offenders received a range of punishments, including being imprisoned or detained (n=3), providing community service (n=11), or being sentenced to probation (n=137). The number of young people placed on probation in 2024 (n=137) was approximately 15% higher than 2023 (n=119).1
Circuit Court
In 2024, the Circuit Court heard cases for 870 defendants that involved 3,653 drug offences. There were 2,970 guilty pleas, which represented a 6% increase from 2023 (N=2,803); of the cases that went to trial, 44 resulted in convictions and 15 resulted in acquittals (see Table 4). Trials resulted in 440 imprisonments/detentions and 480 suspended sentences (see Table 5).1
Appeals (from District Court)
In 2024, 391 appeals from the District Court, representing 953 offences, were dealt with in the Circuit Court.1 Appeals and offences in 2024 were approximately 42% and 12% lower than in 2023, respectively (appeals = 677; offences = 1,078). Table 6 shows a breakdown of resolved offences.
Court of Appeal
The number of appeals that were lodged from the Circuit Criminal Court for drug/misuse of drugs offences was nearly 46% lower in 2024 (n=97) when compared with 2023 (n=179).1 Overall, 179 appeals that originated in the Circuit Criminal Court were resolved in 2024.1 Table 7 indicates that most appeals resolved were for sentence severity (n=110), followed by sentence leniency (n=53), conviction and sentence (n=10), and other (n=6).1
Table 3: Number of juvenile crime outcomes in 2024
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Source: Courts Service (2025)1
Dis = dismiss; S/O = strike out; TIC = taken into consideration; Disq = disqualified; C/S = community service;
Prob = probation; Imp/det = imprisonment or detention; Susp = suspended sentence
Table 4: Number of sentences for drug offences in the Circuit Court in 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
Guilty = guilty pleas; NP = nolle prosequi; TIC = taken into consideration; Quash = quash return for trial;
Dec = accused deceased. * There may be more than one offence brought against a defendant.
Table 5: Number of offence outcomes following conviction in the Circuit Court in 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
TIC = taken into consideration; Disq = disqualified; C/S = community service; Prob = probation; Imp/det = imprisonment or detention; Susp = suspended sentence
Table 6: Number of appeals from District Court, 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
Aff = affirmed; Rev = reversed; S/O N/A = struck out no appearance
Table 7: Summary of resolved appeals in 2024

Source: Courts Service (2025)1
Conclusion
The report was commended by the Chief Justice and chairperson of the Courts Service Board, Ms Justice Elizabeth Dunne. She acknowledged that the Courts Service Annual Report 2024 was “a comprehensive account of the work of the Courts Service and achievements towards realising an improved, modern court system for the benefit of all users” (p. 5).1
1 Courts Service (2025) Courts Service Annual Report 2024. Dublin: Courts Service. Available from: https://www.drugsandalcohol.ie/43644/
2 Courts Service (2013) Courts Service Annual Report 2012. Dublin: Courts Service. Available from: https://www.drugsandalcohol.ie/20180/
3 Office of the Attorney General (2006) Criminal Justice Act 2006. Dublin: Irish Statute Book. Available from: https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/2006/act/26/section/129/enacted/en/html
MM-MO Crime and law > Crime > Substance related crime
MM-MO Crime and law > Substance related offence
MM-MO Crime and law > Criminality > Youth / young offender / offending
MM-MO Crime and law > Criminal penalty / sentence
MM-MO Crime and law > Justice system > Court system
T Demographic characteristics > Person who commits a criminal offence (offender)
VA Geographic area > Europe > Ireland
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