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Home » Special Report » Nearly 8,000 Migrants Died or Vanished on Global Routes in 2025, UN Reveals 

Nearly 8,000 Migrants Died or Vanished on Global Routes in 2025, UN Reveals 

February 28, 2026
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Almost 8,000 migrants died or disappeared along migration routes worldwide last year, according to new figures from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), which has described the mounting toll as a “global failure” demanding urgent political action.

The UN agency reported that at least 7,667 people lost their lives or went missing in 2025 while attempting to cross borders in search of safety, work or stability. The true number, officials cautioned, is likely to be significantly higher due to underreporting, limited access to remote regions and the absence of systematic data collection in many countries.

The findings, released on Thursday, paint a stark picture of continued risk across major migration corridors, from the Mediterranean Sea to the deserts of North Africa and the jungles of Latin America.

Mediterranean Remains Deadliest Route

The Mediterranean crossing between North Africa and Europe once again proved the world’s most lethal migration route. According to IOM data, at least 2,108 people died attempting to reach European shores in 2025.

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In addition, 1,047 migrants died or went missing on the Atlantic route to Spain’s Canary Islands — a perilous ocean journey that has become increasingly popular as authorities tighten controls elsewhere. Departures from West Africa towards the Canaries often involve overcrowded wooden boats navigating treacherous waters with little navigation equipment.

The early months of 2026 have offered little respite. As of Tuesday, 606 deaths had already been recorded on the Mediterranean route alone — an “unprecedented number” for such a short period, according to the agency.

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In the past two weeks, the remains of 23 people have washed ashore on southern Italian and Libyan coastlines. Aid workers believe many more are unaccounted for. “Hundreds more are missing at sea that cannot yet be verified,” officials said.

Amy Pope, Director General of the International Organization for Migration, said the scale of loss should not be viewed as inevitable.

“These deaths are not inevitable,” she said in a statement. “They are the result of policy choices, lack of safe pathways, and insufficient international coordination.”

A “Global Failure”

Ms Pope characterised the continued fatalities as a “global failure” to manage migration humanely and safely. She urged governments to expand legal migration channels, strengthen search-and-rescue operations, and invest in early warning systems to prevent further tragedies.

Humanitarian organisations argue that the absence of safe, regular migration pathways forces people into the hands of smugglers and onto increasingly dangerous routes. As European nations tighten asylum rules and externalise border controls to transit countries, migrants often attempt longer and more hazardous crossings.

Funding reductions have compounded the crisis. Aid groups operating rescue vessels in the Mediterranean have faced financial shortfalls, legal restrictions and, in some cases, criminal investigations. Several NGOs have scaled back operations following new maritime rules in parts of southern Europe that critics say hinder lifesaving efforts.

Limited access to reliable data further obscures the true scale of the crisis. Many migrant deaths occur in remote deserts, mountainous terrain or open ocean, where bodies are never recovered and disappearances go unrecorded.

The IOM’s Missing Migrants Project, which compiles data from coastguards, coroners, survivor testimony and media reports, acknowledges that its figures likely represent only a portion of total fatalities.

Fewer Crossings in the Americas

The 2025 total marks a decrease from 2024, when an estimated 9,200 migrant deaths were recorded globally. The decline is partly attributed to fewer attempts on certain high-risk routes, particularly in the Americas.

Deaths recorded along the US–Mexico border and in the Darién Gap — a dense and lawless jungle corridor between Colombia and Panama — fell significantly. The IOM recorded 409 deaths in these regions combined, the lowest figure since 2014.

Migration through the Darién Gap surged dramatically in recent years, with hundreds of thousands traversing the dangerous terrain amid reports of drowning, assault and disease. However, tougher border enforcement measures, shifting migration patterns and political agreements between regional governments appear to have reduced crossings in 2025.

Despite the relative decline, rights groups warn against interpreting the numbers as progress. They note that stricter border controls can displace migration flows rather than reduce them, pushing people towards alternative — and sometimes deadlier — routes.

Europe’s Policy Crossroads

The figures come at a sensitive moment for European migration policy. The European Union is in the process of implementing reforms to its asylum system, aimed at streamlining procedures and strengthening external border management. Critics argue that without expanded resettlement schemes and humanitarian visas, such reforms risk exacerbating the dangers faced by migrants.

In Italy and Greece, frontline states for Mediterranean arrivals, search-and-rescue capacity remains stretched. Civil society groups say that state-led rescue missions have not matched the scale of departures from Libya and Tunisia.

Meanwhile, departures towards the Canary Islands have surged amid instability and economic hardship in parts of West Africa. Spanish authorities have reported overcrowded reception centres on the islands, while local officials have appealed for greater EU support.

Human Stories Behind the Statistics

Behind the numbers lie individual stories of loss. Families across Africa, the Middle East and Latin America are left without answers when loved ones disappear en route to Europe or North America.

In many cases, relatives rely on informal networks and social media posts to piece together information about missing family members. Identification of remains is often slow or impossible due to lack of forensic resources.

Human rights advocates stress that the absence of safe migration options disproportionately affects young men but increasingly includes women and children. Climate change, conflict, economic instability and political repression continue to drive displacement.

Calls for Safe Pathways

The IOM has renewed calls for expanded labour mobility schemes, humanitarian corridors and stronger international cooperation to address the root causes of migration.

Ms Pope emphasised that migration itself is not the problem. “Migration can be a force for good when managed safely and cooperatively,” she said. “The tragedy lies in forcing people into situations where survival becomes a matter of chance.”

As 2026 begins with hundreds already dead on Europe’s southern maritime border, the data serve as a grim reminder that deterrence alone has not stemmed dangerous journeys.

For policymakers across Europe and beyond, the figures pose an urgent question: whether migration will continue to be managed primarily through restriction and enforcement, or whether safe and legal alternatives will finally be prioritised.

Until then, the Mediterranean — and other unforgiving landscapes along the world’s migration routes — are likely to remain silent witnesses to a humanitarian crisis that shows little sign of abating.

 

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Tags: Canary Islands RouteGlobal Migration RoutesMediterranean Sea DeathsMigrant Fatalities 2025Migration CrisisUN Migration Report
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