The number of candidates taking the test to join the NYPD has plunged by more than half in the past eight years, The Post has learned.
Prospective members of New York’s Finest went from 18,000 in 2017 to just 8,000 this year — a 55% decline, according to data from the Police Benevolent Association, the city’s largest police union.
“The biggest problem is that cops are telling their friends and family not to bother with this job, even as a stepping stone, because it’s not worth it,” a Brooklyn cop with more than a dozen years on the job told The Post.
“You’ll be worked to the bone, attacked by perps and politicians and hammered with nonsense complaints and ticky-tack discipline.”
One longtime NYPD officer said his son plans to join the Suffolk County Police Department this year despite a lower starting salary rather than follow in his father’s footsteps in NYC.
“You’re not forced to work every New Year’s Eve and Fourth of July,” the dad said. “You don’t have to worry about getting stabbed, shot and then sued all the time.”
The Suffolk County department starts cops at $43,000 annually but pay increases to $158,828 after 11 and half years.
New York City cops start at $53,790.
One Brooklyn cop who retired recently said he advises young people against joining the department.
“I tell them if you can find another agency that’s willing to take you I would go,” the 45-year-old said. “I would run for the hills if you can.”
Mayor Adams pledged in November to bring on 1,600 new cops in 2025 — but the city has been having trouble finding viable candidates, a union spokesman said.
Even if the city gets to 800 Academy cadets — candidates who pass the test and meet all the other mental and physical benchmarks — by its Jan. 29 target, the candidate pool will be shallow as it comes time to hire the second class of 800 in April, the union said.
The general rule is that one out of every eight candidates pass the test and meet all the other criteria. So to fill 1,600 academy slots, a pool of almost 13,000 candidates is needed.
Faced with a shrinking pool of prospects, the NYPD has taken the unusual step of reaching out to candidates who took the test as far back as seven years ago, said a source involved in the process.
Making matters worse, the department headcount is the lowest it has been in more than three decades.