Russia vs Ukraine WarDeath Toll — 2026 Updated

Verified military and civilian casualty figures for Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II. Year-by-year data, source comparisons, and historical context

On February 24, 2022, Russia launched a full-scale military invasion of Ukraine — the largest conventional land war in Europe since World War II. More than four years later, the war grinds on with no end in sight, and the human cost has become staggering.

Frontline Ukraine — The conflict has entered its fifth year with no ceasefire in sight. Image: AI Generated

As of March 2026, the combined death toll across both sides — military and civilian — is estimated by international researchers at between 400,000 and 550,000 people. No single figure can be called definitive: Russia actively conceals its losses, Ukraine reports some figures selectively, and international bodies like the UN can only verify what they can independently document.

What is clear is this: Russia has suffered losses on a scale not seen since the Second World War. The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) found that Russia lost more soldiers in the first year of this war than in all its conflicts since 1945 combined — including Chechnya and Afghanistan.

This article compiles the most verified, cross-referenced casualty data available — from ACLED, CSIS, UN OCHA, BBC/Mediazona, and the Kyiv School of Economics — and breaks it down clearly: who has died, when, and according to which source.

⚠ DATA CAVEAT: All casualty figures in active conflicts are estimates. Russia does not publish verified military death counts. Ukrainian figures are disclosed selectively. The UN OHCHR only counts deaths it can independently verify — the actual toll is almost certainly higher. Where ranges exist, we present them. Sources are cited for every figure.

Total Death Count at a Glance

The numbers above represent the most conservative cross-referenced estimates available. The true death toll is widely understood to be higher. Russia has reportedly recorded only 8,000 deaths in official government data — a figure that every independent source, including BBC Russia’s own investigative team, has shown to be a significant undercount.

325,000+
Russian Military Deaths
CSIS Estimate
55,000+
Ukrainian Military Deaths
Zelenskyy (2026)
13,883
Verified Civilian Deaths
UN OHCHR
1M+
Russian Total Casualties
Western Officials
300K+
Ukrainian Total Casualties
Estimates
9M+
Total Displaced
UNHCR

The numbers above represent the most conservative cross-referenced estimates available. The true death toll is widely understood to be higher. Russia has reportedly recorded only 8,000 deaths in official government data — a figure that every independent source, including BBC Russia’s own investigative team, has shown to be a significant undercount.

Casualty Data Table — All Sources Compared

Because Russia and Ukraine both present data strategically, the most reliable picture comes from cross-referencing independent international sources. The table below shows what each credible source reports, and why the numbers differ.

Source Russian Military Deaths Russian Total Casualties Ukrainian Military Deaths Ukrainian Total Casualties Date
CSIS 325,000+ 1,200,000+ Up to 140,000 Up to 600,000 Jan 2026
BBC / Mediazona 267,000–385,500 Not tracked Not tracked Not tracked Feb 2026
UK Ministry of Defence ~280,000+ 1,168,000+ Not disclosed Not disclosed Dec 2025
Western Officials ~300,000 1,000,000 80,000–100,000 250,000–300,000 Feb 2026
Zelenskyy (Ukraine) Not stated Not stated 55,000 380,000+ Feb 2026
The Economist 240,000+ 1,000,000+ 60,000–100,000 400,000–500,000 Oct–Nov 2025
Estonian Intelligence 240,000+ 1,000,000 Feb 2026
Russian Government 8,000 Not disclosed 1,500,000+ (claimed) Feb 2026
UN OHCHR Not tracked Not tracked Not tracked 55,600 civilian casualties Dec 2025
Best Estimate (Russia) 267,000 – 385,500 Best Estimate (Ukraine) 55,000 – 140,000

WHY THE GAP? Russia’s official count (8,000) represents only servicemen processed through official state channels — not contractors, Wagner PMC fighters, mobilized conscripts, or DPR/LPR militia. BBC Russia’s investigative journalists document names and deaths individually through obituaries, regional news and social posts, which is why their count (267,000–385,500) is considered the most methodologically rigorous floor estimate.

Death toll estimates vary dramatically by source — from Russia’s official 8,000 to independent estimates exceeding 385,000.

Casualty Scale Comparison

To understand the scale of Russian losses in context — compared to other major 20th and 21st century conflicts involving Russia — the numbers are extraordinary.

Russian Military Deaths — War Comparison
Ukraine War (2022–2026) 325,000+
Current War
Soviet-Afghan War ~15,000
First Chechen War ~14,000
Second Chechen War ~25,000
Syria Intervention ~500
📌 Key Context — By The Numbers
  • CSIS found Russia lost more soldiers in year one of this war than in all its conflicts since WWII combined
  • Russia is estimated to be losing 40,000 personnel per month since November 2025, according to Western officials
  • The BBC/Mediazona project has individually documented over 200,186 Russian deaths by name as of February 2026 — with the actual toll estimated at 267,000–385,500
  • Of those documented, 10.7% were convicted criminals recruited from prison — a sign of manpower desperation
  • Russia was, for the first time, losing soldiers faster than it could recruit them in early 2026, according to The Telegraph

Civilian Deaths — The Verified Count

Civilian deaths are the hardest to count accurately — and the most politically charged. The UN OHCHR operates with strict evidentiary standards: a death is only “verified” when the organization has gathered sufficient independent evidence. By the end of December 2025, OHCHR had verified 13,883 civilian deaths and 41,000+ injuries since February 24, 2022.

However, OHCHR consistently notes that actual civilian deaths are certainly higher. In areas under Russian control or active combat, bodies cannot be recovered, witnesses cannot be reached, and documentation is impossible. The 13,883 figure is a verified minimum — not a ceiling.

Millions of Ukrainian civilians have been displaced since February 2022. The UN verified over 13,000 civilian deaths — with the actual toll believed to be significantly higher.
Millions of Ukrainian civilians have been displaced since February 2022. The UN verified over 13,000 civilian deaths — with the actual toll believed to be significantly higher.
Category Verified Count Estimated Real Count Source
Civilian Deaths (Ukraine) 13,883 20,000–40,000+ UN OHCHR
Civilian Injuries 40,601+ 70,000+ UN OHCHR
Refugees Abroad 5,000,000+ 5–7 Million UNHCR
Internally Displaced (IDP) 3,700,000+ 3.7–5 Million IOM
Children Killed 580+ Likely Higher Ukraine Govt
Journalists Killed 15+ CPJ / RSF
Russian Civilian Deaths ~1,000+ Unverified Regional Reports

“These numbers are extraordinary. No major power has suffered anywhere near these numbers of casualties or fatalities in any war since World War II.”

-Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), January 2026

Year-by-Year Breakdown: 2022 to 2026

The death toll has not accumulated evenly. Each year of the war has had its own character — from the shock of rapid Russian advances and retreats in 2022, to the grinding attrition of 2023–24, to the intense drone warfare of 2025 and the failed peace negotiations of 2026.

2022
The Invasion — Shock & Counterattack
60K–70K Russian deaths (CSIS est. for Year 1)
100K Ukrainian casualties (est.)
5,500+ Civilian deaths verified (UN OHCHR)
Russia launched its full-scale invasion on February 24. Initial expectations of a swift victory collapsed within weeks as Ukrainian forces repelled advances on Kyiv, Kharkiv and Mykolaiv. Russia suffered enormous losses in early armored assaults — the Kyiv offensive alone is estimated to have cost thousands of Russian soldiers. Ukraine’s successful counteroffensives in Kharkiv Oblast (September) and Kherson (November) recaptured thousands of square miles. The first year was, according to CSIS, 25 times deadlier for Russia than Chechnya. Civilian massacres in Bucha and Mariupol shocked the world.
Sources: CSIS · UN · ACLED
2023
The Grind — Bakhmut, Wagner Mutiny & The Counteroffensive
120K+ Total Russian deaths by June ’23 (Prigozhin claim)
20K Wagner PMC fighters killed (Prigozhin confirmed)
3,900+ Additional civilian deaths verified (UN OHCHR)
The battle for Bakhmut dominated 2023, lasting nearly a year and consuming tens of thousands of lives on both sides — described by military analysts as some of the most intensive urban combat since WWII. Wagner PMC chief Yevgeny Prigozhin confirmed 20,000 of his fighters had died by May, before launching a short-lived mutiny against the Russian military leadership in June. Ukraine’s long-anticipated summer counteroffensive fell short of its objectives. By year-end, the front lines had barely moved, but Russia’s human cost was accelerating.
Sources: UN · ISW · Mediazona
2024
Attrition — Avdiivka Falls, Russia Advances Slowly
219K+ Total Russian deaths by Aug ’24 (Meduza/Mediazona)
43K Ukrainian soldiers killed (Zelenskyy, Dec 2024)
2,100+ Additional civilian deaths verified (UN OHCHR)
Russia captured Avdiivka in February after months of brutal fighting. Despite gains, progress remained glacially slow — Russia averaged fewer than 10 square miles gained per week. Ukraine’s drone warfare came into its own: by October, Ukrainian strikes had reportedly forced nearly 40% of Russia’s oil refining capacity offline. The US suspended significant weapons aid following the November election of Donald Trump, shifting the strategic calculus. Zelenskyy publicly confirmed 43,000 Ukrainian soldiers killed and 370,000 wounded — the first official Ukrainian disclosure of this scale.
Sources: Mediazona · ISW
2025
Escalation — Russia’s Bloodiest Year, Drone War Intensifies
100K+ Russian soldiers killed in 2025 alone (The Economist)
1M+ Total Russian casualties reached (multiple sources)
40K/month Russian personnel losses from Nov 2025 (The Telegraph)
An analysis by The Economist in October 2025 found Russia’s total casualty toll had risen by 60% since the start of the year — with over 100,000 soldiers reportedly killed in 2025 alone, a ratio of roughly five Russian soldiers killed for every one Ukrainian. Russia’s prison recruitment and forced conscription programmes accelerated as voluntary enlistment could no longer keep pace with losses. Ukraine destroyed 60% of Russia’s gas production before winter. By December, Russia’s strike campaign had destroyed over two-thirds of Ukraine’s energy production capacity, leaving millions without power for days at a time.
Sources: Economist · Telegraph
2026
Year Five — No Peace Deal, Losses Continue Daily
1.29M Total Russian personnel losses (Ukraine Armed Forces, March 28, 2026)
1,300/day Current daily Russian personnel losses (Ukraine est.)
55K Ukrainian soldiers killed confirmed by Zelenskyy (Feb 2026)
Peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia — mediated by the US under the Trump administration — have progressed slowly, with no ceasefire as of late March 2026. Russia is reportedly losing more soldiers than it can recruit, yet has not reduced its operational tempo. Ukraine liberated meaningful territory in the first two months of 2026, but Russian forces pushed forward in other sectors. Every power plant in Ukraine has now been damaged. Ukraine’s available electricity generation has fallen from 33.7 GW at the war’s start to approximately 14 GW. The war enters its fifth year with the front lines roughly stable, and the human cost accelerating.
Sources: Ukraine MoD · ISW
Year-by-Year Casualty Chart (2022–2026)
Cumulative Russian military death toll estimates from 2022 to 2026 — losses have accelerated in each successive year.

Military Equipment Losses

Beyond personnel, the war has consumed an extraordinary quantity of military hardware. The Oryx project tracks only losses that can be visually confirmed through photographs — meaning actual losses are considerably higher than what Oryx documents.

Equipment Type Russia (Lost) Ukraine (Lost) Source
Tanks 11,812 5,685 Ukraine MoD / Oryx
Armored Fighting Vehicles 24,297 Ukraine MoD
Artillery Systems 38,936 Ukraine MoD
Aircraft 435 194 Ukraine MoD / Oryx
Naval Vessels 29 42 ISW / Oryx
MLRS (Rocket Systems) 1,707 Ukraine MoD
Air Defence Systems 1,337 Ukraine MoD

NOTE: Ukrainian equipment losses from Oryx are likely more complete than Russian losses because Ukraine operates under less information control. Russian equipment losses tracked by Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence are Ukraine’s own claims and should be considered alongside independent sources like Oryx and satellite data.

The Humanitarian Cost Beyond Deaths

Infrastructure Destruction — Ukrainian Power Grid
Russia’s systematic targeting of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure has left millions without reliable power. As of January 2026, available generation had fallen from 33.7 GW to 14 GW.

The human cost of this war extends far beyond the death toll. Millions of Ukrainians have had their lives shattered in ways that don’t show up in casualty statistics.

Energy infrastructure destruction has been one of Russia’s most consistent strategic objectives. Every power plant in Ukraine has been damaged. Available electricity generation fell from 33.7 GW at the invasion’s start to approximately 14 GW by January 2026. Parts of Ukraine have experienced blackouts lasting days. In late 2025, ISW estimated Russia’s campaign was close to splitting Ukraine’s power grid in two.

The refugee crisis is the largest in Europe since World War II. Over 5 million Ukrainians are registered as refugees across Europe — primarily in Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic — with an additional 3.7 million internally displaced within Ukraine. Nearly one in three Ukrainians has been forced to leave their home.

Ukraine’s economy has been devastated. Defence spending surged from $6.9 billion in 2021 to $71 billion in 2025 — almost entirely funded by European and US aid. With US support reduced by 99% following the Trump inauguration, Europe has stepped up, but the burden on Ukraine’s GDP is existential. The war has destroyed decades of economic development in months.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many people have died in the Ukraine War total?

As of March 2026, the combined military death toll across both sides is estimated at 380,000 to 525,000 — Russia accounting for the large majority, at an estimated 267,000–385,500 killed. Ukrainian military deaths are estimated at 55,000–140,000. An additional 13,883+ civilians have been independently verified as killed by UN OHCHR, with the actual civilian death toll likely significantly higher. Total deaths across all categories likely exceed 400,000–550,000, making this the deadliest conventional war since the Korean War.

How many Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine?

Independent estimates from credible sources range from 267,000 to 385,500 Russian military deaths as of early 2026. The BBC/Mediazona project, which documents deaths individually by name through open-source investigation, had confirmed over 200,186 deaths by name by February 2026, and extrapolates the actual toll at 267,000–385,500. CSIS puts the figure at 325,000+ killed. Russia’s own government claims only 8,000 — a figure rejected by every independent analyst as a severe undercount that excludes contractors, Wagner fighters, conscripts and allied militia.

How many Ukrainian soldiers have been killed?

Ukrainian President Zelenskyy confirmed 55,000 Ukrainian soldiers killed as of February 2026 — the most direct official statement Ukraine has made on the subject. The Economist estimated 60,000–100,000 killed based on satellite and independent casualty analysis. CSIS estimates up to 140,000. The wide range reflects genuine uncertainty: Ukraine classifies much of this data for military security reasons. What is clear is the kill ratio heavily favors Ukraine — The Economist estimated approximately five Russian soldiers die for every one Ukrainian.

How many civilians have been killed in the Ukraine war?

The UN OHCHR has verified 13,883 civilian deaths as of December 31, 2025, along with 40,601+ civilian injuries. OHCHR consistently emphasizes this is a verified minimum — deaths in occupied or active combat zones cannot be confirmed. Independent researchers and Ukrainian sources estimate actual civilian deaths in the range of 20,000–40,000+. The highest single-month toll was March 2022, when over 3,900 civilian deaths were recorded as Russian forces advanced and bombarded cities.

Is Russia running out of soldiers?

According to The Telegraph’s reporting in early 2026, for the first time since the invasion began, Russia is losing more soldiers than it can recruit voluntarily. Russia has been recruiting from prisons (10.7% of documented deaths were former convicts), relying on North Korean troops in some sectors, and offering increasingly large financial incentives. The Kremlin has avoided announcing a new mass mobilization — politically sensitive after the September 2022 mobilization triggered mass emigration. Western officials estimate Russia is losing approximately 40,000 personnel per month since November 2025 — a rate that raises serious questions about long-term sustainability even for a country of 145 million people.

Will there be a ceasefire or peace deal in 2026?

As of late March 2026, no ceasefire is in place. US-mediated negotiations under the Trump administration have produced no concrete agreement. Ukraine’s conditions — full territorial restoration — remain incompatible with Russia’s position, which demands permanent control of four annexed oblasts. The Annual Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community (2026) stated that Russia “sees little reason to stop fighting so long as its forces continue to gain ground.” Only 25% of Ukrainians believe current negotiations will lead to lasting peace, according to polling data cited by Russia Matters.

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Conclusion — What the Numbers Tell Us

The Russia-Ukraine war is, by any measure, the bloodiest conventional conflict since the Korean War — and it is still ongoing.

The numbers paint a picture that defies easy summary. Russia has suffered a generational catastrophe in military terms: somewhere between 267,000 and 385,500 of its soldiers killed, over a million total casualties, and a rate of losses that has outpaced voluntary recruitment for the first time in modern Russian history. The first year alone cost Russia more soldiers than all its wars since 1945 combined.

Ukraine has suffered deeply too — 55,000+ soldiers killed by Zelenskyy’s own account, possibly as many as 140,000 by CSIS estimates, along with the near-total destruction of its energy infrastructure, the displacement of one in three of its citizens, and an economy kept alive only by Western financial support.

And at least 13,883 verified civilian deaths — a number that every credible analyst agrees is a fraction of the true toll.

The CSIS said it plainly: “These numbers are extraordinary. No major power has suffered anywhere near these numbers of casualties or fatalities in any war since World War II.” As of March 2026, with no ceasefire in sight and daily losses continuing on both sides, the final toll remains unwritten.

This page will continue to be updated as new verified data becomes available. Every number here represents a human life — a soldier, a civilian, a parent, a child. Behind every statistic is a story that deserves to be counted.

⚠ EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE DISCLAIMER: All statistics on this page are compiled from publicly available sources for educational, research and public awareness purposes only. Figures represent best-available estimates and may vary between reporting organizations. In active conflicts, numbers are updated as verified data becomes available. WarCasualties.com does not advocate for any political position or take sides in this conflict.

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