Missing Migrants Project is an initiative implemented since 2014 by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) to document deaths and disappearances of people in the process of migration towards an international destination. As collecting information is challenging, all figures remain undercounted. The locations in most cases are approximate. Each number represents a person, as well as the family and community that they leave behind.
The Missing Migrants Project dataset represents incidents in which a person lost their life during migration to an international destination. The figures shown throughout are best understood as a minimum estimate of the true number of people’s lives lost during migration worldwide.
For every person included in the Missing Migrants Project data, there is a family awaiting news of their loved one and affected by their loss in a multitude of ways. The impacts of migrant deaths and disappearances on their families left behind are profound and complex, and solutions are urgently needed to address families’ many unmet needs.
Sangatte, Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0014
Türkiye-Europe land route
42.69790627, 27.27041729
Strandzha, Burgas, Bulgaria
Europe
2025.MMP0024
Western Balkans
44.876817, 15.760792
In the road near the Izačić Border Crossing, M5, Izačić, Bosnia & Herzegovina
Europe
2025.MMP0026
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.950073, 1.763564
Body recovered just offshore of the beach in Sangatte, Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0055
Mainland Europe to the UK
51.00427151, 2.308526343
At exit 54 on the A16 Highway between Dunkirk and Calais, Grande-Synthe, Pas de Calais, France
Europe
2025.MMP0056
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.93677641, 1.909533016
On the A16-A26 Highway interchange between Dunkirk and Calais, Pas de Calais, France
Europe
2025.MMP0059
Belarus-EU border
55.812252, 26.972418
Unspecified location on the Belarus-Latvia border, Braslaw Distric, Vitebsk Region, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0060
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.425949, 1.559403
Plage du Terminus, Berck, Pas-de-Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0060
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.425949, 1.559403
Plage du Terminus, Berck, Pas-de-Calais, France- English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0081
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.968225, 1.830112
Off Calais, Pas-de-Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0092
Uncategorized
37.24786561, -1.872580903
On the national highway, Vera, Almería, Spain
Europe
2025.MMP0116
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.98068814, 1.718233718
Off Plage des Hemmes de Marck, Pas-de-Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0120
Uncategorized
51.00366315, 2.304910413
A16 highway near Grand-Synthe, France
Europe
2025.MMP0139
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.678466, 1.564299
Off the coast of Équihen-Plage, France - English Channel Crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0145
Mainland Europe to the UK
51.032538, 2.115447
Unspecified location of the coast of Gravelines, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0213
Mainland Europe to the UK
51.07442409, 1.40955782
British SRR off Dover, Kent, United Kingdom - departure from Cap Blanc-Nez - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0218
Belarus-EU border
55.89644056, 27.65490535
Unspecified location near the Latvian border, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0246
Belarus-EU border
53.60179271, 24.73408973
Shchuchyn district, Grodno region, Belarus - near the border with Lithuania
Europe
2025.MMP0247
Belarus-EU border
52.40332812, 23.82158244
Kamyenyets district, Brest region, Belarus - near the border with Poland
Europe
2025.MMP0248
Belarus-EU border
55.99094821, 27.87655043
Unspecified location 10 meters from the Latvian border, near Polatsk, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0251
Belarus-EU border
56.07102596, 27.9336509
Unspecified location at the Latvian border fence, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0256
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.627596, 1.556435529
Off the coast of Hardelot, near Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0267
Belarus-EU border
55.78129574, 27.91510045
Unspecified location close to Verkhnyadzvinsk, Belarus (by the border with Latvia)
Europe
2025.MMP0269
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.94139545, 1.943666179
Parking lot in Marck (Pas-de-Calais), France
Europe
2025.MMP0270
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.7600854, 1.490912061
Unspecified location off the coast of Boulogne-sur-Mer, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0271
Mainland Europe to the UK
51.0495691, 1.991529972
Unspecified location off the coast of Gravelines, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0598
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.87378719, 1.615042816
Found near Châtelet beach, Tardinghen, Pas-de-Calais department, France
Europe
2025.MMP0599
Mainland Europe to the UK
50.98430156, 1.917725855
Remains retrieved at plage de Marck near the Phare de Walde lighthouse, France - English Channel crossing
Europe
2025.MMP0673
Belarus-EU border
52.25939352, 23.20263117
Found in the Bug River on the Belarusian border near Stary Bubel village, Lublin, Poland
Europe
2025.MMP0675
Belarus-EU border
54.05295303, 24.72851447
Found in the Katra River near the Belarusian border, Varėna, Lithuania
Europe
2025.MMP0684
Western Balkans
46.275966, 15.865986
Unspecified location in Zgornje Gruškovje, Slovenia
Europe
2025.MMP0701
Belarus-EU border
56.02818478, 27.85569478
Unspecified location in Verkhniadzvinsk District near the Latvian border, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0702
Belarus-EU border
56.01811007, 27.82833992
Unspecified location in Verkhniadzvinsk District 150 meters from the Latvian border, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0703
Belarus-EU border
56.02818478, 27.85569478
Unspecified location in Verkhniadzvinsk District near the Latvian border, Belarus
Europe
2025.MMP0704
Belarus-EU border
56.01811007, 27.82833992
Unspecified location 2 meters from the Latvian border, Belarus
Europe
Title
Total Number of Dead and Missing
2025.MMP0013
1
2025.MMP0014
2
2025.MMP0024
1
2025.MMP0026
1
2025.MMP0055
1
2025.MMP0056
1
2025.MMP0059
1
2025.MMP0060
2
2025.MMP0081
1
2025.MMP0092
1
2025.MMP0116
1
2025.MMP0120
1
2025.MMP0139
1
2025.MMP0145
1
2025.MMP0213
1
2025.MMP0218
1
2025.MMP0246
1
2025.MMP0247
1
2025.MMP0248
1
2025.MMP0251
1
2025.MMP0256
1
2025.MMP0267
1
2025.MMP0269
1
2025.MMP0270
2
2025.MMP0271
2
2025.MMP0598
1
2025.MMP0599
1
2025.MMP0673
2
2025.MMP0675
3
2025.MMP0684
1
2025.MMP0701
1
2025.MMP0702
1
2025.MMP0703
2
2025.MMP0704
1
Title
Website Date
2025.MMP0014
2025.MMP0055
2025.MMP0120
2025.MMP0013
2025.MMP0024
2025.MMP0026
2025.MMP0218
2025.MMP0056
2025.MMP0092
2025.MMP0059
2025.MMP0060
2025.MMP0081
2025.MMP0116
2025.MMP0246
2025.MMP0247
2025.MMP0139
2025.MMP0145
2025.MMP0598
2025.MMP0599
2025.MMP0248
2025.MMP0673
2025.MMP0213
2025.MMP0675
2025.MMP0251
2025.MMP0256
2025.MMP0701
2025.MMP0267
2025.MMP0269
2025.MMP0702
2025.MMP0703
2025.MMP0270
2025.MMP0704
2025.MMP0271
2025.MMP0684
Migration within Europe
Most migration in Europe is intraregional, meaning that the majority of migrants in Europe come from another European country. It is enabled by the freedom of movement and common visa system of the 26 countries in the Schengen Zone. Nonetheless, some people without legal status in the Schengen Zone and other countries in Europe migrate irregularly within the continent, which can pose risks to their lives.
Migration within Europe: context in brief
Most migration in Europe is intraregional, meaning that the majority of migrants in Europe come from another European country. It is enabled by the freedom of movement and common visa system of the 26 countries in the Schengen Zone. Nonetheless, some people without legal status in the Schengen Zone and other countries in Europe migrate irregularly within the continent, which can pose risks to their lives.
The information here focuses on the main migration routes and border crossings within Europe where since 2014 (when Missing Migrants Project records begin), people are known to have lost their lives as they try to reach their destinations. Journalists and civil society organizations have documented the risks associated with these migration routes since the early 1990s.[1] The information below does not disregard the risks associated with irregular migration in other parts of the continent. Information on deaths on migration routes to reach Europe, via the Mediterranean Sea, the Atlantic Route to the Canary Islands and from Comoros to Mayotte is available on the Mediterranean and the Africa regional pages.
Western Balkans
The Western Balkans route is typically used by migrants, including asylum seekers, who arrive in Greece or Bulgaria from Turkey, who are trying to reach Western or Northern Europe. From Greece, they move through North Macedonia to Hungary, or to Western European countries via Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and/or Croatia. Though the number of people using this route was particularly high in 2015-2016, when nearly 1 million people from the Syrian Arab Republic, Iraq and Afghanistan arrived in Greece via the Eastern Mediterranean, people continue to transit through the Western Balkans, albeit at far lower numbers than in earlier years. Migrants on this route often face strict border controls, compelling many to take dangerous irregular journeys through often-hazardous terrain in order to escape detection.
Though many migrants on this route often arrive in Greece after crossing the Eastern Mediterranean, others arrive via the land border between Greece and Turkey’s Edirne region. Migrants must often cross the Evros/Meriç river, which with the implementation of strict border controls in this region mean that migrants sometimes try to cross at night in order to escape detection, which increases the risks to their safety. In addition, incidents involving violent pushbacks and collective expulsion by border authorities have been reported and documented here and on the Western Balkans route as a whole.
English Channel crossing
The area around Calais, France has been frequented by migrants attempting to reach the United Kingdom since at least the 1990s. From the coast near Calais, people attempt to reach the United Kingdom irregularly either via the Eurotunnel, by stowing away on a truck or other vehicle or via the Port of Calais, where they attempt to board ferries or use small unseaworthy boats from other points on the coast of France to try to reach Dover or other ports in southern England. While young men typically have been the ones to embark on this journey, in 2019 and 2020, there was an increase of unaccompanied children and families travelling together by boat from the French and Belgian coasts.
Italy/France
Another route through Europe used by migrants in irregular situations involves crossing the heavily securitized border from Italy, around Ventimiglia, to France. This route is typically used by migrants who arrive in the country via the Central Mediterranean via Libya or Tunisia, or those who had traveled along the Western Balkans route and entered Italy via Trieste. The crossing from Italy to France can pose significant hazards for migrants attempting to avoid detection with limited resources and transit options. People travel either by foot through mountainous territory and/or on busy motorways, or by hopping on trains - in some cases even riding on the top of moving train cars.
Overview of migrant deaths in Europe
Taken together, hundreds of people have died on migration routes in Europe since 1990s.For people travelling without the needed documentation, avoiding detection by authorities must be central to their decision-making about their journeys, as they do not have access to safe and legal mobility options. This may include efforts to conceal themselves, to blend-in, and/or take dangerous routes to overcome physical barriers, all of which can lead to fatalities. The direct causes of death during migration in Europe are often linked to hazardous transport, including accidents involving trains, planes, and other vehicles. Asphyxiation during transit is also unfortunately common, with one of the most devastating incidents being when more than 70 women, men and children died in the back of the truck in which they were travelling through Austria in late 2015. Those who travel by foot are also sometimes struck and killed by cars, trucks or trains. Deaths linked to exposure and lack of access to adequate shelter, medicine, and other necessities are also sadly common, particularly on routes which go through remote regions.
While Missing Migrants Project tries to compile all available details which are known of the person who died and the circumstances of their death, many people who lose their lives remain unidentified. Missing Migrants Project has recorded the deaths of hundreds of people for whom no identifying information is available, meaning that the families of missing migrants may not know the fate of their loved one. For others, only partial information is known, but indicate that men, women and children from countries across the Middle East, South Asia, and most regions in Africa have all died trying to migrate within Europe.
Data collection and challenges
In addition to the general challenges inherent to collecting data on migrant deaths, there are also unique challenges to the European context. As of 2020 no national or international authority publishes data or even comprehensive reports on migrant deaths in their respective jurisdiction. Therefore, data on migrant deaths in the Europe region are derived primarily from local police and media reports as well as from non-governmental actors, including IOM country offices in Europe. Still, migrants who go missing or die attempting to cross the internal borders of Europe often receive little attention and this means that data on migrant deaths in Europe are likely an undercount of the true number.
The Missing Migrants Project dataset represents incidents in which a person lost their life during migration to an international destination. The figures shown throughout are best understood as a minimum estimate of the true number of people’s lives lost during migration worldwide.
For every person included in the Missing Migrants Project data, there is a family awaiting news of their loved one and affected by their loss in a multitude of ways. The impacts of migrant deaths and disappearances on their families left behind are profound and complex, and solutions are urgently needed to address families’ many unmet needs.