⚠️This fact has been debunked

The claim vastly inflates terrorism statistics. According to the GAO, there were 231 domestic terrorism incidents with known offenders from 2010-2021, not 7,200+. The confusion likely stems from FBI investigation numbers (9,049 open cases by 2021) versus actual attacks. Most investigations don't result in confirmed terrorist acts. The 7,200 figure has no basis in FBI, DHS, or Global Terrorism Database records.

There have been over 7,200 acts of terrorism against the US over the last 15 years.

The Truth About U.S. Terrorism Statistics

2k viewsPosted 16 years agoUpdated 3 hours ago

You've probably seen the alarming claim: "Over 7,200 acts of terrorism against the United States in the last 15 years." It sounds terrifying. It's also completely false.

The real number? According to the Government Accountability Office, there were 231 domestic terrorism incidents with known offenders between 2010 and 2021. That's not a typo—231, not 7,200. So where did this inflated figure come from?

Investigations Aren't Attacks

The confusion likely stems from mixing up FBI investigations with actual terrorist attacks. By 2021, the FBI had 9,049 open domestic terrorism cases. That's a lot of investigations—but the vast majority never result in an actual attack. Some are preventive (stopping plots before they happen), others turn out to be false alarms, and many involve individuals being monitored who never act.

Counting investigations as attacks is like counting every police case as a crime committed. The numbers tell wildly different stories.

What the Data Actually Shows

Here's what really happened from 2010 to 2021:

  • 231 domestic terrorism incidents with identified perpetrators
  • 145 deaths from these incidents
  • 370 injuries across all attacks
  • 94 deaths came from racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism
  • Anti-government extremism was the second-largest category

In 2021 specifically, there were 73 terrorist attacks and plots in the United States, resulting in 30 fatalities. These are serious numbers that warrant attention—but they're nowhere near 7,200.

Why This Myth Matters

Exaggerating terrorism statistics doesn't just spread misinformation—it distorts our understanding of actual threats. When people believe the U.S. faces 7,200+ terrorist acts, it creates unnecessary panic and can lead to misguided policy decisions.

The real threat is significant enough without inflation. FBI domestic terrorism investigations more than doubled since 2020, and the bureau tracks roughly 1,700 active cases as of 2025. That's a genuine concern worth discussing with accurate numbers.

The bottom line: Terrorism is a real issue that law enforcement takes seriously. But 7,200 acts in 15 years? That's not serious analysis—it's fear-mongering dressed up as fact. The truth is sobering enough: 231 confirmed incidents, each representing real victims and real danger, without the need for wild exaggeration.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many terrorist attacks have there been in the US in the last 15 years?
From 2010 to 2021, there were 231 domestic terrorism incidents with known offenders in the United States, resulting in 145 deaths and 370 injuries according to the Government Accountability Office.
What is the difference between terrorism investigations and terrorist attacks?
Terrorism investigations are cases the FBI monitors to prevent potential threats, while terrorist attacks are actual incidents that occurred. By 2021, there were 9,049 open FBI cases but only 231 confirmed attacks from 2010-2021—most investigations never result in attacks.
What type of terrorism is most common in the United States?
Racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism accounts for the most violent domestic terrorism incidents in the U.S., causing 94 deaths from 2010-2021. Anti-government extremism is the second-largest category.
Has domestic terrorism increased in recent years?
Yes. FBI domestic terrorism investigations more than doubled since 2020, growing 357% from 2013 to 2021 (from 1,981 to 9,049 open cases). In 2021, there were 73 attacks and plots with 30 fatalities, up from 5 in 2020.
Where do false terrorism statistics come from?
False statistics often confuse FBI investigation numbers with actual attacks, or include data from other countries. The claim of 7,200+ U.S. terrorism acts has no basis in FBI, DHS, or Global Terrorism Database records.

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