One in four Asian American and Pacific Islander adults experienced a hate crime or incident in the past year, revealing that racial discrimination remains a persistent threat to the community even as overt attacks have declined from pandemic-era highs, according to a new AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll. While the rate has stabilized from last summer's survey, it represents a concerning baseline of harassment and violence that continues to affect millions of Americans based solely on their race or ethnicity.
About one-quarter of AAPI adults said they have personally experienced a hate crime or incident in the past year, such as verbal harassment or physical assault, a level consistent with a survey conducted last summer but down from an October 2023 poll in which 36% said they were victims of an act of abuse tied to their race or ethnicity over the prior year. Preliminary FBI data also shows a decline as the pandemic receded into the background, with anti-Asian hate crimes and bias crimes overall falling between 2024 and 2025 based on information submitted by law enforcement agencies.
A Stubborn Problem That Won't Go Away
Karthick Ramakrishnan, founder and executive director of AAPI Data, said, "The key is there's been a decline but a stabilization. So, it hasn't declined since last year," and added, "Both hate crimes and hate incidents are still an issue in our community." Even so, about 3 in 10 AAPI adults in the new survey said it is "extremely" or "very" likely they will be a victim of discrimination based on their race or ethnicity in the next five years.
The poll found that about 1 in 10 AAPI adults said they have been called a racial or ethnic slur in the past 12 months, down from roughly 2 in 10 in October 2023. Around 15% said they have been verbally harassed or abused by another person in the past year because of their race or ethnicity, down from 23% in 2023.
Shifting Rhetoric: From Pandemic Scapegoating to Immigration Attacks
Advocates said the tone of the rhetoric has shifted away from COVID-19-related tropes toward anti-immigrant sentiments. Stephanie Chan, data and research director at Stop AAPI Hate, said, "We're seeing things like 'Go back to China' still. But, it's more like 'ICE is going to deport you,'" and added, "The rhetoric that's being used to justify very harsh and aggressive immigration enforcement, all of this is also feeding into anti-AAPI hate persisting."
The survey also included personal accounts. Ambar Capoor, 52 and India-born, said that in his diverse Los Angeles neighborhood, a white man pushed him unprovoked while he was waiting in line at a restaurant and told him, "You don't belong here. You should go back to your country." Capoor, who is a naturalized citizen and has lived in the U.S. for 26 years, said, "None of this stuff normally bothers me," and added, "If somebody starts an altercation, that I'll walk away from." But Capoor, a Democrat, said he thinks the divisive political climate has emboldened people to openly say racist things.
Nosheen Hamid, 36 and a stay-at-home mother with a toddler, said she has lived in Salt Lake City for 17 years. In her native Pakistan, her family was considered a minority because of their Catholic faith. In her mostly white Utah community, she said she gets racially profiled too. A couple of months ago, she said, a door-to-door salesman approached her home and seemed surprised she lived there. "He was like, 'Are you renting here?' He asked me a few times and it got to me for just a second," Hamid said. "People didn't expect me to be in the space that I was, work-wise, school-wise."
Economic Pressures Compound Daily Struggles
The poll found that AAPI adults are much more preoccupied with economic concerns than discrimination. Around 4 in 10 said personal finances are a "major source" of stress, and about 2 in 10 said the same thing about health concerns and relationships with family or friends. In contrast, only about 1 in 10 said discrimination is currently a major source of stress in their lives, and around half said discrimination is not a source of stress at all.
John Magner, 58, who is half white and also of Hawaiian and Chinese ancestry, said he faces more discrimination from Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders around his home of West Jordan, Utah, who do not believe he is part Hawaiian. He said a Pacific Islander customer at the hardware store where he works called him "cracker and a little wannabe Pacific Islander." Magner said, "I work full-time but we're struggling," and added, "Inflation and then also some family stuff that's gone on, having to pay medical bills. It's just bills."
Ramakrishnan said he also considers whether there is less scapegoating of immigrants of color because people understand that it has no bearing on the current economy. He said, "The likely reasons for those economic struggles have nothing to do with race or immigration," and added, "They have to do with other factors, like tariffs, war on foreign policy, AI data centers. Those are all the things that people see that are driving up costs."
The poll of 1,228 U.S. adults who are Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders was conducted last month using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based Amplify AAPI Panel. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 4.5 percentage points. The poll is part of an ongoing project exploring the views of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders, which are usually not highlighted in other surveys because of small sample sizes and lack of linguistic representation.
Why This Matters:
The persistence of anti-AAPI hate incidents at elevated levels—affecting one in four community members annually—demonstrates that racial discrimination remains a structural problem requiring sustained attention from institutions and policymakers, not merely a pandemic-era aberration. The shift in hateful rhetoric from COVID-19 scapegoating to immigration-based attacks reveals how vulnerable communities face evolving threats tied to broader political discourse, suggesting that protecting civil rights requires vigilance against multiple forms of xenophobia. That 3 in 10 AAPI adults expect to face discrimination in the next five years indicates a profound lack of security and belonging among millions of Americans, undermining the promise of equal protection under law. The fact that economic stress outweighs discrimination as a daily concern for many AAPI adults highlights how communities of color often face compounding burdens—navigating both systemic racism and the material hardships that affect working families across the country. As experts note, addressing these economic struggles requires focusing on structural factors like trade policy and healthcare costs rather than scapegoating immigrant communities, pointing toward the need for evidence-based economic policy that serves all working people.