This graph provides a comparison of the estimated battle casualties during the Normandy Invasion in June 1944, and the subsequent Allied campaign that liberated Paris several months later, in August 1944—a crucial period that helped bring World War II to an end in Europe the following year.
The estimated total battle casualties for Germany were 320,000, including 30,000 killed, 80,000 wounded, and 210,000 missing. More than 70 percent of the missing were eventually reported as captured.
German casualties were extrapolated from a report of German OB West, September 28, 1944, and from a report of a German army surgeon for the period June 6–August 31, 1944.
(Read the article Sir John Keegan wrote for Britannica about the Normandy Invasion.)
The estimated total battle casualties for the United States were 135,000, including 29,000 killed and 106,000 wounded and missing.
United States casualties are taken from Office of the Adjutant General, Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths in World War II: Final Report, 7 December 1941–31 December 1946, page 92. Figures are for U.S. Army and Army Air Forces casualties in Normandy and northern France, June 6–September 14.
The estimated total battle casualties for the United Kingdom were 65,000, including 11,000 killed and 54,000 wounded or missing.
British casualties are taken from L.F. Ellis et al., Victory in the West, vol. 1, The Battle of Normandy (1962, reissued 1993), page 493. Figures are for 21st Army Group, June 6–August 31, minus Canadian numbers given in C.P. Stacey, below.
The estimated total battle casualties for Canada were 18,000, including 5,000 killed and 13,000 wounded or missing.
Canadian casualties were taken from C.P. Stacey, The Victory Campaign: The Operations in North-West Europe, 1944–1945 (1960), page 271. Figures are for June 6–August 23. Under Canadian command were the Poles, who suffered some 1,350 casualties from August 1 to August 23, 1944.
The estimated total battle casualties for France included 12,200 civilians killed or missing.
French casualties were provided by the Mémorial de Caen, France. Figures are for the départements of Calvados, Manche, and Orne from June 6 to August 31, 1944.
The combined battle casualties of the Normandy Invasion were 550,200.