Berlin, 10 February 2026 – The Americas show no progress in the fight against corruption, according to Transparency International’s 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) published today, with the region scoring an average of just 42 out of 100. Since 2012,12 of the 33 countries have significantly worsened, while only Dominican Republic (37) and Guyana (40) have significantly improved, highlighting a decade of stalled or reversed efforts. Years of government inaction have eroded democracy, enabled organised crime, and directly harmed citizens by undermining human rights, public services, and security. For years, corruption has enabled organised crime to infiltrate politics in countries like Colombia (37), Mexico (27) and Brazil (35), affecting people’s lives. Now, Costa Rica (56) and Uruguay (73), the region’s strongest democracies and CPI performers, are suffering from the violence fuelled by corruption and organised crime, while countries with failed and co-opted institutions, including Haiti (16) and Nicaragua (14), continue to struggle with entrenched corruption and criminal networks. In Peru (30), corruption in public services has had severe consequences, including a scandal in which alleged bribes to bypass health inspections reportedly led to contaminated food being distributed in public schools. In Argentina (36), investigations into alleged corruption in the management of funds for medicines for people with disabilities show similar risks for vulnerable groups. In Venezuela (10), the country’s low score reflects years of widespread corruption and illicit activities that have seen poverty and malnutrition soar as millions of families survive on limited food, water and electricity. Oversight and accountability are being weakened in several countries as civic space contracts. In El Salvador (32), restrictions on civil society organisations limit scrutiny and independent monitoring of government actions. In Guyana (40), harassment and intimidation of independent media and civil society similarly curtail oversight and accountability. Luciana Torchiaro, Regional Advisor for Latin America and the Caribbean at Transparency International said: “To improve people’s lives and build resilience to organised crime, governments must put the fight against corruption at the centre of their agenda. This means protecting fundamental freedoms, enforcing the law through a strong and independent judiciary, enhancing international cooperation on corruption cases, and making public procurement more transparent.” KEY FINDINGS FOR THE REGION The CPI ranks 182 countries and territories by their perceived levels of public sector corruption on a scale of zero (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean). NOTES TO EDITORS For each country’s individual score and changes over time, as well as global and regional analysis, see the CPI 2025 webpage: https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2025 (goes live at 07:01 CET, 10 February 2026.)