Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Casualties of the Russo-Ukrainian war


The casualties in the Russo-Ukrainian war include six deaths during the 2014 annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, 14,200–14,400 military and civilian deaths during the war in Donbas, and between 400,000 and 1.5 million estimated casualties (killed and wounded) during the Russian invasion of Ukraine from 24 February 2022 to November 2025.

The War in Donbas's deadliest phase (pre-2022) occurred before the Minsk agreements, aimed at ceasefire and settlement. Despite varied reports on Ukrainian military casualties due to underreporting, official figures eventually tallied, indicating notable military and civilian casualties on both sides. The war also saw a large number of missing and captured individuals, and efforts to exchange prisoners between conflicting parties. Foreign fighters and civilian casualties added to the war's complexity, with international involvement and impacts extending beyond the immediate conflict zones.

Reports from Russian and Ukrainian sources relating to the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine are conflicting, but indicate high military and civilian casualties. Both foreign fighters and foreign civilian deaths have been reported. Efforts to identify and repatriate the deceased, alongside the treatment of prisoners of war, highlighted the human cost of the ongoing conflict.

During the Russian annexation of Crimea from 23 February through 19 March 2014, six people were killed. The dead included three protesters, two Ukrainian soldiers and one Russian Cossack paramilitary. On 10 August 2016, Russia accused the Special Forces of Ukraine of conducting a raid near the Crimean town of Armiansk which killed two Russian servicemen. The government of Ukraine dismissed the report as a provocation. Ten people were forcibly disappeared between 2014 and 2016 and were still missing as of 2017.

Civilian casualties of the war in Donbas

A mural of Ukrainian soldiers who died during the war in Donbas in 2014

The overall number of estimated deaths in the war in Donbas from 6 April 2014 to 31 December 2021 was 14,200–14,400. This included about 6,500 pro-Russian separatist fighters, 4,400 Ukrainian fighters, and 3,404 civilians. This number includes non-combat military deaths, as well as deaths from mines and unexploded ordnance. The vast majority of the deaths took place in the first year of the war, when major combat took place before the Minsk agreements.

BreakdownFatalitiesTime periodSource
14,200–14,4006 Apr. 2014 – 31 Dec. 2021United Nations
3,404 (306 foreign)6 Apr. 2014 – 31 Dec. 2021United Nations
4,4006 Apr. 2014 – 31 Dec. 2021United Nations
4,5356 Apr. 2014 – 23 Feb. 2022Museum of Military History
6,3106 Apr. 2014 – 23 Feb. 2022UALosses project
6,5006 Apr. 2014 – 31 Dec. 2021United Nations
171 Jan. – 25 Feb. 2022DPR & LPR
400–5006 Apr. 2014 – 10 Mar. 2015US State Department

Initially, the known number of Ukrainian military casualties varied widely due to the Ukrainian Army drastically understating its casualties, as reported by medics, activists and soldiers on the ground, as well as at least one lawmaker. Several medical officials reported they were overstretched due to the drastic number of casualties. Eventually, the Ukrainian Defence Ministry stated that the numbers recorded by the National Museum of Military History were the official ones, although still incomplete, with 4,535 deaths cataloged by 23 February 2022.

According to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, 1,175 of the Ukrainian servicemen died due to non-combat causes by 5 March 2021. Subsequently, the military did not publish new figures on their non-combat losses, stating they could be considered a state secret.

Deaths of Ukrainian soldiers in 2018.

The following table does not include the 298 deaths from the shootdown of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 or the deaths of Ukrainian servicemen, which are listed separately.

RegionFatalitiesTime periodSource
2,420 civilians and DPR fighters6 April 2014 – 15 February 2015OCHA
1,185 civilians and LPR fighters1 May 2014 – 15 February 2015OCHA
4,374 civilians6 April 2014 – 18 February 2022DPR
2,269 civilians6 April 2014 – 23 February 2022LPR

A wall of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery in Kyiv has been transformed into a war memorial with the photos of thousands of Ukrainian soldiers who were killed during the war in Donbas

By 15 May 2016, the Donetsk region's prosecutors reported 1,592 civilians had gone missing in government-controlled areas, of whom 208 had been located. At the same time, a report by the United Nations stated 1,331–1,460 people were missing, including at least 378 soldiers and 216 civilians. 345 unidentified bodies, of mostly soldiers, were also confirmed to be held at morgues in the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast or buried. In all, as of late October, 774 people were missing according to the government, including 271 soldiers. By the end of December 2017, the number of confirmed missing on the Ukrainian side was 402, including 123 soldiers. The separatists also reported 433 missing on their side by mid-December 2016, and 321 missing by mid-February 2022.

As of mid-March 2015, according to the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), 1,553 separatists had been released from captivity during prisoner exchanges between the two sides. Subsequently, Ukraine released another 316 people by late February 2016, according to the DPR and other media reports, while by September, 1,598 security forces members and 1,484 civilians had been released by the rebels. 1,110 separatist fighters and supporters, including 743 civilians, were reportedly still being held by Ukrainian forces as of late March 2016, according to the DPR. They updated the figure of separatist prisoners to 816, including 287–646 civilians, in December. At the end of May 2015, the Ukrainian commander of Donetsk airport, Oleg Kuzminykh, who was captured during the battle for the complex, was released.

In December 2017, a large prisoner exchange took place where the rebels released 73 out of 176 prisoners they were holding, while Ukraine released 306 out of 380 of their prisoners. Out of those that were released by Ukraine, 29 brought to the exchange point refused to go back to separatist-held territory, while 40 who were already previously released did not show up for the exchange. Meanwhile, out of those released by the rebels, 32 were soldiers. This brought the overall number of prisoners released by the rebels to 3,215. Among those still held by the separatists, 74 were soldiers. The number of released prisoners was updated to 3,233 in early March 2019. At the end of December 2019, a new prisoner exchange took place, with Ukraine releasing 124 separatist fighters and their supporters, while 76 prisoners, including 12 soldiers, were returned to Ukraine by the rebels. Another five or six prisoners released by the separatists decided to stay in rebel-controlled territories. The last exchange took place on 16 April 2020, with the separatists releasing 20 people, including 17 civilians, in exchange for 14. while 214 remained in captivity.

Foreign volunteers have been involved in the conflict, fighting on both sides. The NGO Cargo 200 reported that they documented the deaths of 1,479 Russian citizens while fighting as part of the rebel forces. The United States Department of State estimated 400–500 of these were regular Russian soldiers. Two Kyrgyz and one Georgian have also been killed fighting on the separatist side. Additionally, at least 253 foreign-born Ukrainian citizens or foreigners died on the Ukrainian side. One of those killed was the former Chechen rebel commander Isa Munayev.

In late August 2015, according to a reported leak by a Russian news site, Business Life (Delovaya Zhizn), 2,000 Russian soldiers had been killed in Ukraine by 1 February 2015.

At least 306 foreign civilians were killed in the war in Donbas prior to the 2022 invasion:

  • 298 passengers and crew of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
  • Italian journalist Andrea Rocchelli and his Russian fixer and interpreter, activist Andrei Mironov
  • Four other civilian journalists and media workers from Russia: Igor Kornelyuk and Anton Voloshin, a correspondent and sound engineer respectively; Anatoly Klyan, a camera operator; and Andrey Stenin, a photojournalist
  • One Russian civilian killed in the shelling of Donetsk, Russia
  • One Lithuanian diplomat

As a consequence of the conflict, large swaths of the Donbas region have become contaminated with landmines and other explosive remnants of war (ERW). According to the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Ukraine, in 2020 Ukraine was one of the countries most affected by ERW in the world, and had had nearly 1,200 casualties caused by mines or ERW since the beginning of the conflict in 2014. A report by UNICEF released in December 2019 said that 172 children had been injured or killed due to landmines and other explosives.

Ukrainian estimates of Russian military losses tended to be high, while Russian estimates of their own losses tended to be low. Combat deaths can be inferred from a variety of sources, including satellite imagery and video image of military actions. According to a researcher at the Department of Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University in Sweden, regarding Russian military losses, Ukraine engaged in a misinformation campaign to boost morale and Western media were generally happy to accept its claims, while Russia was "probably" downplaying its own casualties. Ukraine also tended to be quieter about its own military fatalities. According to BBC News, Ukrainian claims of Russian fatalities included the injured as well. Western countries emphasized the Russian military's toll, while Russian news outlets have largely stopped reporting on the Russian death toll. In early June 2022, the Svetlogorsk City Court in the Kaliningrad region ruled that a list of Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine, published by privately owned news websites, constituted "classified information" and its publication could be considered a criminal offense.

Information on military casualties is a state secret in both Russia and Ukraine, while the Ukrainian government has been especially secretive, restricting access to demographic data that could be used to estimate its losses. In addition, Western intelligence agencies have been reluctant to disclose their internal calculations of Ukrainian military casualties for fear of undermining an ally. American officials previously said that Ukraine withholds this information from even its closest allies.

The number of civilian and military deaths is impossible to determine with precision. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) considers the number of civilian casualties to be considerably higher than the one the United Nations are able to certify.

Political scientist Neta Crawford estimated 323,000 dead in the war by July 2025, with an average rate of 7,690 killed per month—surpassing the average of 2,826 killed per month in the Gaza war and 772 killed in the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021). According to Crawford, while civilians accounted for 80 percent of the fatalities in the Gaza war and 26 percent in the War in Afghanistan, only four percent of those killed in Ukraine were civilians.

BreakdownCasualtiesTime periodSource
15,578 killed, 43,352 wounded(confirmed minimum, thought higher)24 Feb. 2022 – 31 Mar. 2026United Nations
12,000+ killed (confirmed),16,000+ captive24 Feb. 2022 – 17 June 202424 Feb. 2022 – 16 Dec. 2024Ukraine
394 killed (in Western Russia)24 Feb. 2022 – 25 Dec. 20247x7
1,074 killed (including Crimea)24 Feb. 2022 – 15 Jan. 2026Russia
500,000–600,000 casualties(100,000–140,000 killed)24 Feb. 2022 – 1 Jan. 2026CSIS estimate
200,000 killed24 Feb. 2022 – 19 Feb. 2026BBC News estimate
1,500,000 killed and wounded24 Feb. 2022 – 24 Feb. 2026Russian Ministry of Defense
91,559 killed (incl. non-combat),95,165 missing, 4,454 captured(conf. by names)24 Feb. 2022 – 8 Apr. 2026UALosses project
70,000 killed, 35,000 missing24 Feb. 2022 – 4 Dec. 2024Yuriy Butusov citing sourceswithin the AFU headquarters
55,000 killed, 380,000 wounded,81,000 missing8,000 captured24 Feb. 2022 – 4 Feb. 202624 Feb. 2022 – 27 Feb. 202624 Feb. 2022 – 30 Oct. 2024Ukraine
1,147,740 losses24 Feb. 2022 – 6 Nov. 2025Armed Forces of Ukraine
1,225,000 killed and wounded24 Feb. 2022 – 26 Jan. 2026UK estimate
1,200,000 casualties(275,000–325,000 killed)24 Feb. 2022 – 1 Jan. 2026CSIS estimate
1,100,000–1,400,000 casualties(230,000–430,000 killed)24 Feb. 2022 – 24 Feb. 2026The Economist estimate
353,600-504,000 killed24 Feb. 2022 – 1 May 2026BBC News Russian estimate
352,000 killed24 Feb. 2022 – 31 Dec. 2025Mediazona & Meduza estimate
332,600-480,500 killed(217,808 conf. by names)24 Feb. 2022 – 9 May 2026BBC News Russian &Mediazona estimate
22,000 killed, 40,000 wounded24 Feb. 2022 – 20 May 2023PMC Wagner
20,000 killed, 40,000 wounded24 Feb. 2022 – 30 Nov. 2023UK estimate
18,961–20,071 killed(conf. by names)24 Feb. 2022 – 9 May 2026BBC News Russian &Mediazona
21,000–23,500 killed24 Feb. – 31 Dec. 2022BBC News Russian estimate
6,000+ killed and wounded14 Dec. 2024 – 15 June 2025UK estimate
6,000 killed and wounded, 2 captured14 Dec. 2024 – 12 Feb. 2026South Korean estimate
2,304 killed14 Dec. 2024 – 25 Apr. 2026BBC News analysis of DPRK memorial

In September 2022, Russia's Ministry of Defence confirmed that 5,937 Russian soldiers had been killed in combat. In addition, the DPR confirmed that by 22 December 2022, 4,163 of their servicemen had been killed and 17,329 wounded. Subsequently, leaked US intelligence documents cited the Russian FSB that Russian forces suffered 110,000 casualties by 28 February 2023. Wagner PMC chief Yevgeny Prigozhin confirmed that his organization had lost over 20,000 troops killed by 25 May 2023. He went on to claim that overall, the Russian military had lost 120,000 dead in Ukraine by late June 2023. He accused the Ministry of Defence of systematically downplaying Russian losses.

According to BBC News Russian and the Mediazona news website, out of 217,808 Russian soldiers and contractors whose deaths they had documented by 9 May 2026, 3.3 percent (7,095) were officers, while 12.6 percent (27,475) were Motorized Rifle Troops and 2.4 percent (5,135) were members of the Russian Airborne Forces (VDV). In addition, 8.6 percent (18,671) of Russian soldiers whose deaths had been confirmed were people who were mobilized, while 11.3 percent (24,534) were convicts. The BBC further stated that

The actual toll is likely much higher than can be determined through open sources. Military experts we interviewed suggest that our analysis of Russian cemeteries, war memorials, and obituaries may account for between 45% and 65% of the real death toll.

Thus, the BBC stated that the actual death toll of Russian forces, counting only Russian servicemen and contractors (i.e. excluding DPR/LPR militia), was 332,600 to 480,500 by 1 May 2026.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) found that 60,000 to 70,000 Russian soldiers died in the first year of the war in Ukraine, more than in all its other wars since World War II combined, including 13,000 to 25,000 in Chechnya over 15 years and 14,000 to 16,000 in Afghanistan. Thus, the first year of the Ukraine war was 25 times deadlier than Chechnya and 35 times more so than Afghanistan.

In February 2023, Meduza published an article about the portion of Russian military casualties classified as missing, describing systemic problems with Russia's military record-keeping making it difficult for families to obtain their bodies or file for compensation by the government. Sergey Krivenko, head of the human-rights advocacy organization ″Citizen. Army. Law.″, estimated the amount of missing Russian soldiers at this time to be around 24,000, adding that most of the missing are soldiers who have been killed but have not had their body recovered.

Meduza, analyzing data on confirmed soldiers killed and data retrieved from the Russian probate registry, estimated 75,000 Russian soldiers were killed since the start of the invasion and by the end of 2023, a statistical estimate within a wide range of between 66,000 and 88,000 killed. Subsequently, several months later, Meduza gave a new estimate of 64,000 soldiers killed in 2022 and 2023, based on excess deaths reported by Rosstat, including those in Crimea, but not other Ukrainian regions seized by Russia. Using a similar analysis, but in addition using a statistical model of the ratio of total deaths to deaths confirmed by name, stratified by age group, and the Mediazona updated counts of named deaths, Meduza gave an updated estimate of total Russian deaths of 120,000 killed through to 30 June 2024. Several days later, The Economist made its own calculation using the severely-wounded-to-killed ratio from leaked documents by the United States Department of Defense, giving an estimate of between 462,000 and 728,000 Russian soldiers killed or wounded since the start of the conflict. According to their estimate, approximately 2% of all Russian men between the ages of 20 and 50 may have been killed or seriously wounded in Ukraine since February 2022. By the end of 2024, Meduza estimated that over 165,000 Russian soldiers had died during the war.

According to NATO and Western military officials, around 1,200 Russian soldiers were killed or wounded in Ukraine every day on average in May and June 2024. In July 2024, Chief of the General Staff of the British Army Sir Roland Walker said that with the current way of fighting, it would take Russia five years to control the four regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhia that Russia claims as its own, and it would cost Russia from 1.5 to 1.8 million casualties. He said there are "no winners" in Russia's invasion of Ukraine, adding that "it is an utter devastation for both sides and lost generations." By August 2024, the daily average of Russian military casualties in the conflict was about 1,000 soldiers, according to a Western official.

Military graves at Cemetery No. 7 in Abakan, Khakassia, Russia, August 2025

In late January 2025, The New York Times reported that analysts concluded that Russia's losses, including killed and severely injured, were slightly fewer than two soldiers for every Ukrainian soldier killed or severely wounded, after they combined multiple different estimates of Ukrainian losses.

In June 2025, Russia's ambassador to the UK Andrey Kelin denied that Russian casualties in the war in Ukraine had reached one million, but refused to give the actual number of casualties, telling CNN that there were about 600,000 Russian troops in Ukraine, down from 700,000 in June 2024, and that 50–60,000 new troops were being recruited and sent to Ukraine every month. Concurrently, a report by the US-based Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) put Russian military casualties at over 950,000, including up to 250,000 killed.

In October 2025, Institute for the Study of War (ISW) cited alleged leaked Russian data published by the I Want to Live hotline operated by the Main Directorate of Intelligence of Ukraine, according to which Russia suffered 281,550 total losses between January and August 2025, including: 86,744 killed, 33,996 missing and 158,529 wounded. The *Mediazona'*s data department's analysis of the published list concluded that "significant anomalies" were revealed, stating the figures in the leak appeared "questionable", but also that it "appears plausible, to put it cautiously, albeit at the very highest end of the probable range" and questioned certain figures like losses reported for the "Dnepr" group or abnormally high killed-to-wounded ratio, though acknowledging that the "grey zone" between front lines means the wounded are often left with very little chance of survival. According to online intelligence group Frontelligence Insight the numbers appeared to be "fairly accurate", and some other groups agreed with this assessment.

According to a UK Defence Intelligence report on 14 October 2025, Russia suffered approximately 1.118 million total casualties since the beginning of the full-scale invasion, including 332,000 casualties since 1 January. According to the report, Russia's casualty rate reached its high in December 2024 with 1,570 losses per day on average. Afterwards it was gradually decreasing and dropped to 930 daily casualties in August. It has been steadily increasing again since then, surpassing 1,000 daily casualties between 5–12 October.

An analysis published by The Economist on 17 October 2025, based on data from satellites and "more than 200 credible estimates of casualties from Western governments and independent researchers", stated that Russia's total casualty toll had increased by 60% since the start of the year, with over 100,000 soldiers reportedly killed since the beginning of 2025. According to the report, even if the total number of Ukrainian soldiers killed since the start of 2025 was twice the tally reported by the UALosses project, it would still result in a ratio of "roughly five Russian soldiers killed for one Ukrainian". The report also stated that the number of Russian soldiers killed in the war amount to 0.5%–1.2% of the country's pre-war cohort of men under the age of 60.

In February 2026, The Telegraph reported that for the first time since the invasion, Russia was losing more soldiers than it was able to recruit, with Western officials saying that Russia was losing 40,000 per month since November while recruiting up to 35,000 as total casualties surpassed 1.25 million, more than the total number of American casualties sustained by the US in World War II. The Telegraph reported that Russia had suffered over 1,700 casualties on 17 March, with the Ukrainian unmanned systems force being responsible for 900 of them.

On 3 April 2026, Ukrainian president Zelenskyy said that Russia had suffered its highest losses in a single month since the start of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, with over 35,000 killed or wounded Russian soldiers in March.

Monument to Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russo-Ukrainian War in 2022.

Ukraine confirmed it had 10,000 killed and 30,000 wounded by the start of June 2022, while 7,200 troops were missing, including 5,600 captured. At the height of the fighting in May and June 2022, according to Ukrainian president Zelenskyy and presidential advisor Mykhailo Podolyak, between 100 and 200 Ukrainian soldiers were being killed in combat daily, while presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych said 150 soldiers were being killed and 800 wounded daily. Mid-June, Davyd Arakhamia, Ukraine's chief negotiator with Russia, told Axios that between 200 and 500 Ukrainian soldiers were killed every day. By late July, Ukrainian daily losses fell to around 30 killed and about 250 wounded. In August 2023, The New York Times quoted unnamed U.S. officials as saying that up to 70,000 Ukrainian troops had been killed and 100,000 to 120,000 wounded. However, a new estimate by a U.S. official in October 2024, put the number of Ukrainian casualties at more than 57,500 killed and 250,000 wounded. As of 25 February 2024, Ukraine confirmed 31,000 of its soldiers had been killed in the conflict. In late November 2024, based on all previous estimates of Ukrainian military casualties, The Economist estimated Ukrainian losses at between 60,000 and 100,000 killed and 400,000 wounded. On 8 December 2024, US president-elect Donald Trump claimed 400,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed and seriously wounded so far during the war. Subsequently, President Zelenskyy announced 43,000 Ukrainian soldiers were killed and 370,000 were wounded, but that "approximately 50%" of these soldiers recovered and had returned to active duty. He updated the Ukrainian military's casualty toll in mid-February 2025, to over 46,000 killed and 380,000 wounded.

Russia's Ministry of Defence claimed 61,207 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed and 49,368 wounded by September 2022, and in mid-December 2024, updated its claim of Ukrainian military casualties to almost 1,000,000 killed and wounded. A new update was given in late February 2026, putting Ukraine's overall military casualties at more than 1,500,000.

Military graves at the Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv, Ukraine, December 2023

According to the UALosses project started at the end of 2023, found to be reliable by Mediazona, Meduza, the Book of Memory group, BBC News Russian and The Economist, themselves also running projects tracking military fatalities in the conflict, it had documented by name the deaths of 91,559 Ukrainian fighters as of 8 April 2026, as well as 95,165 missing in action, for a total of 186,724 dead or missing since the start of the invasion, including non-combat losses.

As of mid-April 2023, around 7,000 Ukrainian soldiers remained missing, of whom some 60-65 per cent were believed to be prisoners. The number of missing was updated to over 90,000 by the end of February 2026, 90 percent of which were thought to be soldiers.

Yuriy Lutsenko, the former Ukrainian Prosecutor General and member of the opposition party European Solidarity, said on Ukrainian television in January 2024 that around 500,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed or wounded, and that there were about 30,000 casualties every month.

Men from the poverty-stricken regions of Russia's Far North, Far East and Siberia were overrepresented among Russian war casualties. Buryats, Kalmyks, Tuvans, Chukchi, and Nenets were reported as Russia's ethnic minority groups suffering disproportionately high casualty rates among Russian forces. On the Ukrainian side, per UALosses, as of 8 April 2026, the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast has the highest number of confirmed Ukrainian soldiers dead or missing at 18,255, while the Kirovohrad Oblast has the highest confirmed death and missing count per capita at 8.086 per 1,000.

In terms of confirmed deaths of officers of both belligerents, according to groups collecting that information, 7,095 Russian officers had been killed as of 9 May 2026, and 7,210 Ukrainian officers had been killed as of 8 April 2026.

On 10 March 2026, president Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian head of military intelligence Lieutenant General Oleh Ivashchenko said that according to Russian documents obtained by Ukrainian intelligence networks, some 1,315,000 Russian soldiers had been killed or wounded in action since the start of the full scale invasion of Ukraine. President Zelenskyy said that these figures were "understated".

A civilian killed in Kyiv following Russian missile strikes on 10 October 2022

By 31 January 2026, OHCHR had recorded 56,550 civilian casualties in Ukraine since 24 February 2022: 15,172 killed and 41,378 injured, but said they believe the real number is higher. This included 49,186 (12,392 killed and 36,794 injured) occurred on territory covered by the government of Ukraine and 7,364 (2,780 killed and 4,584 injured) on territory controlled by Russian armed forces or their affiliates. By 31 December 2025, 13,172 deaths were caused by explosive weapons "with wide area effects", 472 by mines and explosive remnants, 1,355 by small arms, including from crossfire, or road accidents involving military or civilian vehicles.

As of 30 June 2023, OHCHR said it had received information on 287 civilian casualties in Western Russia, with 58 killed and 229 injured, while six more were killed and 16 injured in the Republic of Crimea. Another two civilians were killed and one injured in a Ukrainian drone attack on the Crimean bridge on 17 July 2023, while five civilians were killed and 151 were injured by a Ukrainian missile attack in Sevastopol, in Crimea, on 23 June 2024. Sergey Aksyonov, the Russian-installed head of Crimea, also alleged that a Ukrainian attack on drilling platforms in the Black Sea near Crimea had left seven Chernomorneftegaz workers missing. The 7x7 Russian opposition media outlet confirmed the deaths of 394 civilians in Russia by 25 December 2024, not including those in Crimea. In addition, missiles struck the Polish border village of Przewodów in Lublin Voivodeship on 15 November 2022, and killed two Polish civilians. Elsewhere, Azerbaijan Airlines Flight 8243 was mistakenly shot down and crashed at Aktau, Kazakhstan, on 25 December 2024, killing 38 people, including 25 Azerbaijanis, seven Russians and six Kazakhs.

In April 2022, the civilian death toll included more than 200 children. In March 2022, 55 of the war-related child deaths were from the Kyiv area and another 34 were from Kharkiv. On 17 February 2023, the Ukrainian prosecutor general announced that at least 461 children had been killed since the start of the invasion, with a further 923 wounded. Most of these child victims were from the Donetsk region.

By February 2023, Ukrainian chief prosecutor for war crimes Yuriy Belousov claimed that "there could be 100,000 civilians killed across Ukraine, whose bodies will have to be found and identified once occupied territory is liberated." A Project on Defense Alternatives study calculated a "modest" figure of 40,000 Ukrainian civilian dead by April 2023. In May 2023, US officials claimed Ukrainian civilian deaths were at 42,000, twice the then-estimated figure for Ukrainian military losses. According to the Kyiv Independent, Russia does not allow monitoring in territories it controls, where civilian deaths are thought to be highest.

Ukrainian humanitarian NGOs estimate that 7,000–30,000 Ukrainian civilians have been abducted by Russian forces from territories under their control. One group estimated 70,000 civilians were abducted. Many of them are reported to be held in Russian prisons and penal colonies, and some reportedly died (e.g. Victoria Roshchyna).

AreaFatalitiesTime periodSourceRef.
2624 February 2022 – 31 December 2023
725+24 February 2022 – 19 August 2023
17124 April 2022 – 15 May 2024
28,673+24 February 2022 – 12 February 2025
1,69924 February – 31 December 2022
56624 February 2022 – 30 May 2024
424 February 2022 – 27 February 2023
924 February 2022 – 4 January 2024
20024 February 2022 – 24 February 2024
1,56924 February – 2 April 2022
81524 February – 31 December 2022
2218 April 2022 – 6 July 2023
41324 February 2022 – 17 January 2023
5124 February 2022 – 2 March 2024
2227 June 2022
2524 February – 23 June 2022
34124 February – 31 December 2022
3024 February 2022 – 14 March 2024
824 February 2022 – 15 August 2023
8824 February 2022 – 18 October 2023
28324 February – 31 December 2022
AreaFatalitiesTime periodSourceRef.
1,791–5,09026 February 2022 – 22 December 2024
972+17 February 2022 – 28 December 2023
686 June 2023, 1 January 2026
824 February 2022 – 17 July 2023
523 June 2024
39424 February 2022 – 25 December 2024
AreaFatalitiesTime periodSourceRef.
215 November 2022
3825 December 2024

At least 218 foreign civilians from 27 countries are confirmed to have been killed during the war within Ukraine and outside it. Over 70 missing from Azerbaijan were also reported.

CountryDeaths and missing.mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}Ref.
Azerbaijan122 killed, 70 missing
Armenia18
Russia16
Greece12
France6
Kazakhstan6
United States5
United Kingdom5
Syria4
Poland3
Turkey3
Belarus2
Moldova2
Afghanistan1
Algeria1
Bangladesh1
Canada1
Croatia1
Czech Republic1
Egypt1
India1
Iraq1
Ireland1
Israel1
Lithuania1
Spain1
Uganda1

Paul Urey and Dylan Healy, two British aid workers, were captured by Russian forces. Healy was charged with 'forcible seizure of power' and undergoing 'terrorist' training, but later released on 21 September 2022, while Urey died in captivity. An American citizen was also detained by pro-Russian separatists forces and accused of 'participation in pro-Ukrainian protests'. He was released on 28 October 2022, and reached Ukrainian-controlled territory by 14 December.

Excluding the Russian, North Korean, and Ukrainian military casualties, at least 2,449–3,101 combatants, foreign citizens or foreign-born, were killed during the war. By January 2023, another 1,000 had been wounded while fighting on the Ukrainian side. Below is a list of the nationalities of foreign combatant casualties.

CountryCapturedAllegianceStatusRef.
Australia1Ukrainian Armed ForcesPrisoner
Azerbaijan1Ukrainian Armed ForcesReleased
Belarus2Kastuś Kalinoŭski BattalionPrisoners
Colombia9Ukrainian Armed ForcesPrisoners
Croatia1Ukrainian Foreign LegionReleased
Czech Republic1Ukrainian Armed ForcesPrisoner
Georgia3Ukrainian Foreign LegionPrisoners
Israel1Ukrainian Foreign LegionReleased
Ivory Coast1Ukrainian Armed ForcesPrisoner
Morocco1Ukrainian Foreign LegionReleased
Serbia1Azov BattalionPrisoner
Sweden1Ukrainian Foreign LegionReleased
United Kingdom6Armed Forces of UkraineUkrainian Foreign Legion4 Released,2 Prisoners
United States2Ukrainian Foreign LegionReleased
CountryCapturedAllegianceStatusRef.
Azerbaijan1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Belarus8Russian ArmyPrivate military companyPrisoners
Bosnia1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Brazil1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Burundi1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Cameroon2Russian ArmyPrisoners
China2Russian ArmyPrisoners
Colombia2Russian ArmyPrisoners
Congo Republic1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Cuba4Russian ArmyPrisoners
Egypt1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Ghana2Russian ArmyPrivate military companyPrisoner
Greece1Russian ArmyPrisoner
India1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Iran1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Iraq2Russian ArmyPrisoners
Italy1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Kazakhstan1Private military companyPrisoner
Kenya1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Kyrgyzstan2Russian Army1 Released,1 Prisoner
Nepal7Russian ArmyPrisoners
Nigeria3Russian ArmyPrisoners
Philippines1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Senegal1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Sierra Leone1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Slovakia1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Somalia1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Sri Lanka6Russian ArmyPrisoners
Syria1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Tajikistan1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Togo2Russian ArmyPrisoners
Uganda1Russian ArmyPrisoner
Uzbekistan4Russian ArmyPrivate military company1 Released,3 Prisoners
Yemen2Russian ArmyPrisoners

Two Peruvians, an Azerbaijani, a Colombian, a Czech, and an Estonian foreign fighter were also reported missing while fighting alongside the Ukrainian military, and 50 Nepalese, seven Indians and three Belarusians went missing while fighting for Russia. Russian sources also presented the passport of an American fighter who was claimed to have either been killed or captured, although this was not confirmed.

Sergiy Kyslytsya, the Ukrainian Ambassador to the United Nations, announced on 27 February 2022, that the country had reached out to the International Committee of the Red Cross for help in the repatriation effort of the bodies of killed Russian soldiers. Due to concerns that Russia was not reporting the number or any casualties of soldiers in Ukraine, the Ukrainian Interior Ministry began issuing appeals that same day for relatives of Russian soldiers to help identify wounded, captured, or killed soldiers. The initiative, called Ishchi Svoikh (Russian: Ищи Своих, lit. 'Look for Your Own'), appeared aimed in part at undermining morale and support for the war in Russia and was quickly blocked by the Russian government's media regulator the day the initiative began at the request of Russia's Prosecutor-General's Office.

Ukrainian authorities began using facial recognition technology supplied to them by Clearview AI on 12 March 2022, to help identify the deceased, along with potentially using it to uncover Russian spies, vet people at checkpoints and potentially combat misinformation. The Chief Executive of Clearview claimed that the technology could be more effective than matching fingerprints or other identifiable aspects of the individual, although a study by US Department of Energy raised concerns about decomposition reducing its effectiveness. Kyiv authorities have also reached out to the International Commission on Missing Persons, which was formed to help after the 1990s Balkan conflicts and the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, and identifies individuals by collecting DNA samples from the deceased and families to cross match. The organization will also document the location of the body and how the individual died.

As Russian soldiers began to retreat the identification of the dead civilians who had been unreported due to communication issues and constant fighting began to be reported. Documentation and identification of the bodies began with many hastily dug graves and rubble being cleared away to photograph and identify the bodies as well as count the number involved. Handwritten tags and passports have been attached to the bodies after identification before they are taken by coroners and officials. In some locations villagers kept track of the deceased, such as in Yahidne, a village north of Kyiv, where they used a school basement wall to write the names of the deceased while under Russian control.

As of late May 2022, Ukrainian authorities had stored at least 137 bodies of Russian soldiers that were collected near Kyiv, as well as 62 in the Kharkiv region. In December 2024, Russia's Deputy Minister of Defence Anna Tsivilyova mentioned 48,000 soldiers missing in action for whom relatives have contributed DNA samples as part of search applications.

In March 2026, TVP World reported on intercepted Russian messages which according to the HUR depicted a repeated practice in some Russian units where Russian soldiers are instructed by officers to behead killed Russian soldiers and bring the head along with documents for identification. According to the HUR, this is done so that the heads can be used to identify the bodies without the need to evacuate corpses out of combat zones.

Dates ofremains exchangesRussianUkrainianRef.
June 2022374365
29 March 202429121
12 April 20242399
2 August 202438250
18 October 202489501
8 November 202437563
20 December 202442503
24 January 202549757
14 February 202545757
28 March 202543909
18 April 202541909
16 May 202534909
10-16 June 2025786,060
16 July 2025191,000
19 August 2025191,000
19 September 2025241,000
20 November 2025301,000
26 February 2026351,000

16-year-old victim of a land mine in Kharkiv region

On 2 August 2023, an investigation by The Wall Street Journal found that Ukrainian medical amputations in the war came to between 20,000 and 50,000 including both military and civilians. In August 2025, the National Institute of Strategic Studies reported that officially, the National Health Service of Ukraine recorded 95,000 amputations carried out in Ukraine on military personnel and civilians. Including amputations carried outside Ukraine the number was as high as 120,000. In comparison, during World War One 41,000 British and 67,000 Germans needed amputations.

Captured Russian soldiers during the battle of Sumy.

Ukrainian soldiers surrender at the end of the siege of Mariupol.

Russia reported it had captured 572 Ukrainian soldiers by 2 March 2022, while Ukraine stated 562 Russian soldiers were being held as prisoners as of 19 March, with 10 previously reported released in prisoner exchanges for five Ukrainian soldiers and the mayor of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov. Subsequently, the first large prisoner exchange took place on 24 March, when 10 Russian and 10 Ukrainian soldiers, as well as 11 Russian and 19 Ukrainian civilian sailors, were exchanged. Among the released Ukrainian soldiers was one of 13 Ukrainian border-guard members captured during the Russian attack on Snake Island. Later, on 1 April 86 Ukrainian servicemen were exchanged for an unknown number of Russian troops.

Ukraine's ambassador to the U.S., Oksana Markarova, reported that a platoon of the 74th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade from Kemerovo Oblast surrendered to Ukraine, saying they "didn't know that they were brought to Ukraine to kill Ukrainians". Ukraine held a series of press conferences with about a dozen POWs, where the POWs made comments against the invasion, how they had been manipulated and for the conflict to end. According to The Guardian, while it was likely that Ukraine was using the discomfort of captured soldiers for propaganda purposes, the videos ultimately succeeded in showing the Russian servicemen's "authentic sense" of regret for having come to Ukraine. Amnesty International said that Article 13 of the Third Geneva Convention prohibits videos of captured soldiers. Captured Ukrainian soldiers with British citizenship were recorded calling for Boris Johnson to arrange for them to be freed in exchange for pro-Kremlin Ukrainian politician Viktor Medvedchuk. MP Robert Jenrick called the videos, broadcast separately on Russia-24, a "flagrant breach" of the Geneva Convention. A Russian spokeswoman claimed that she told Johnson in a phone call about the men's treatment that the UK should "show mercy" to Ukrainian citizens by stopping military aid to the Ukrainian government when asked to show the men mercy.

The head of the Ukrainian Coordination Headquarters for POW Treatment, Iryna Vereshchuk, raised concerns that Russia had not released information to Ukrainian authorities on the location of any Ukrainian POW's and the International Red Cross had not been allowed to see them, as of 16 March.

By 21 April, Russia claimed that 1,478 Ukrainian troops had been captured during the course of the siege of Mariupol. On 22 April, Yuri Sirovatko, Minister of Justice of the Donetsk People's Republic, claimed that some 3,000 Ukrainian prisoners of war were held in the territory of the DPR. On 20 May, the Russian Ministry of Defense claimed that 2,439 Ukrainian soldiers had been taken prisoner over the previous five days as a result of the surrender of the last defenders of Mariupol, entrenched inside the Azovstal Iron and Steel Works. On 26 May, Rodion Miroshnik, ambassador of the Luhansk People's Republic to Russia, claimed that around 8,000 Ukrainian POWs were held within the territory of the DPR and LPR. According to a statement by Sergei Shoigu, Russia's Minister of Defence, in early June 2022, 6,489 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

In a report by The Independent on 9 June, it cited an intelligence report that more than 5,600 Ukrainian soldiers had been captured, while the number of Russian servicemen being held as prisoners had fallen to 550, from 900 in April, following several prisoner exchanges. In contrast, the Ukrainska Pravda newspaper claimed 1,000 Russian soldiers were being held as prisoners as of 20 June.

According to Ukraine, as of mid-November 2023, 4,337 Ukrainians were being held by Russia as prisoners of war, including 3,574 soldiers and 763 civilians, while by this point 2,598 Ukrainians had been released, including 133 civilians. As of early June 2024, according to Russia, 6,465 Ukrainian soldiers were still being held prisoner in Russia and 1,348 Russian soldiers were prisoners in Ukraine, while by this point 3,210 Ukrainians had been confirmed released, including 143 civilians. By 24 August 2025, the number of prisoners released by Russia during prisoner exchanges rose to 6,095, including more than 240 civilians. An additional 555 Ukrainians were released by Russia outside of the exchanges. At least 800 Russian soldiers had also been confirmed to have been released by late February 2023. Between August 2024 and March 2025, 971 Russian soldiers had been captured during fighting in Kursk Oblast, according to Ukraine. As of the beginning of February 2025, 1,382 Russian servicemen that were previously thought missing were confirmed to be in Ukrainian captivity, while the overall number of Russian prisoners of war was thought to be much higher.

According to the UALosses project, 6,404 Ukrainian soldiers were being held as prisoners as of 23 April 2025. By 8 April 2026, the number had fallen to 4,454.

A study of Russian prisoners of war captured by Ukraine found that 55% of the soldiers had been motivated to fight to "improve their livelihoods", while 36% were ideologically motivated.

Official prisoner exchanges
1.24 March 202210 soldiers, 11 civilians10 soldiers, 19 civilians
2.1 April 2022Unknown86 soldiers
3.9 April 2022Unk. soldiers, 18 civilians12 soldiers, 14 civilians
4.14 April 2022Unknown22 soldiers, 8 civilians
5.19 April 2022Unknown60 soldiers, 16 civilians
6.21 April 2022Unknown10 soldiers, 9 civilians
7.28 April 2022Unknown33 soldiers, 12 civilians
8.30 April 2022Unknown7 soldiers, 7 civilians
9.6 May 2022Unk. soldiers, 11 civilians28 soldiers, 13 civilians
11.10 June 20224 soldiers4 soldiers, 1 civilian
N/A17 June 2022UnknownUnknown (at least 1 civ.)
N/A18 June 20225 N/A5 civilians
N/A28 June 202215 N/A16 soldiers, 1 civilian
N/A29 June 2022144 soldiers144 soldiers
N/A2 September 2022Unknown14 soldiers
23.21 September 202255 soldiers, 1 civilian213 soldiers, 2 civilian
24.30 September 2022Unknown4 soldiers, 2 civilians
25.11 October 2022Unknown32 soldiers
26.13 October 202220 soldiers20 soldiers
27.17 October 202230 soldiers, 80 civilians96 soldiers, 12 civilians
28.26 October 2022Unknown10 soldiers
29.29 October 202250 soldiers50 soldiers, 2 civilians
N/A3 November 2022107 soldiers107 soldiers
N/A11 November 202245 soldiers45 soldiers
N/A23-24 November 202285 soldiers85 soldiers, 1 civilian
N/A26 November 20229 soldiers9 soldiers, 3 civilians
N/A1 December 202250 soldiers50 soldiers
N/A6 December 202260 soldiers60 soldiers
N/A14 December 2022Unknown64 soldiers, 1 civilian
35.31 December 202282 soldiers140 soldiers
36.-48.2023592+ soldiers995 soldiers, 7 civilians
49.-59.20241,310 soldiers1,329 soldiers, 29 civilians
60.15 January 202525 soldiers24 soldiers, 1 civilian
61.5 February 2025150 soldiers150 soldiers
62.19 March 2025175 soldiers197 soldiers
63.19 April 2025261 soldiers277 soldiers
64.6 May 2025205 soldiers205 soldiers
65.23-25 May 2025880 soldiers, 120 civilians880 soldiers, 120 civilians
66.9 June-23 July 20251,200 soldiers, 2 civilians1,100 soldiers and civilians
67.14 August 202584 soldiers33 soldiers, 51 civilians
68.24 August 2025146 soldiers, 8 civilians146 soldiers, 8 civilians
69.2 October 2025185 soldiers, 20 civilians185 soldiers, 20 civilians
Unofficial prisoner releases
1 March 20221 soldier5 soldiers
16 March 20229 soldiers1 civilian
15 April 20224 soldiers5 soldiers
12 July 2022None2 soldiers, 3 civilians
24 March 20235 soldiersNone
8 June 2023None11 soldiers
4 March 2026None2 soldiers
  • List of ongoing armed conflicts

  • Outline of the Russo-Ukrainian War

  • The Wall of Remembrance of the Fallen for Ukraine

  • Casualties during the 2013–2014 Ukraine crisis

  • Military history of the Russian Federation

  • @media screen{html.skin-theme-clientpref-night .mw-parser-output .sister-inline-image img[src*="Wiktionary-logo-en-v2.svg"]{filter:invert(1)brightness(55%)contrast(250%)hue-rotate(180deg)}}@media screen and (prefers-color-scheme:dark){html.skin-theme-clientpref-os .mw-parser-output .sister-inline-image img[src*="Wiktionary-logo-en-v2.svg"]{filter:invert(1)brightness(55%)contrast(250%)hue-rotate(180deg)}} Media related to Casualties of the War in Donbas at Wikimedia Commons

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Casualties of the Russo-Ukrainian war — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report