¹ Daily change compared to Data as of September 15, 2020, 09:22 CET. Based on 2018 population figures; ² Figures without this country's dependencies. If daily change is negative, then the dependencies reported new figures earlier than the “main” country; This table shows worldwide countries with a population of one million or more. 41 countries or dependencies with a smaller population can be found under the "Details" tab.

Supplementary notes

The numbers shown here are not an automated update but a manual one. Numbers can change fast, sometimes within minutes, after they show on this platform. It's Statista's policy to update these numbers at least once per day, but we strive to do this more frequently than that. This includes updates on Saturday and Sunday. Delays are, however, possible.



For this statistic, numbers reported by Johns Hopkins University have been compared with the latest available population numbers. The population numbers in the table are rough indicates, the calculation used more precise numbers. Spain's population, for example, is 46.72 in the table but was 46.723749 in the calculation. Hence that the "deaths per million" might differ.



² The source originally put numbers together for some countries and their dependencies. Denmark included, for example, numbers for Denmark, Greenland and the Faroe Islands, whereas the Netherlands included numbers for Curacao, Aruba and the Dutch part of Saint Martin. The United States had similar issues with Guam, Puerto Rico, the (U.S.) Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands. To avoid confusion, these numbers have been separated: the numbers for the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands and Denmark only concern the "main" country. The number for the United States only concerns the 50 states.



For consistency, countries with a smaller population (and a potentially much higher impact of coronavirus deaths) were not included in the table. These countries were as follows:





San Marino, 42 deaths, roughly 1,243 per million;

Andorra, 53 deaths, 688 per million;

Sint Maarten (Dutch part), 19 deaths, 467 per million;

Isle of Man, 24 deaths, 285 per million;

Channel Islands, 48 deaths, 282 per million;

French Guiana, 64 deaths, 216 per million;

Aruba, 22 deaths, 208 per million;

Luxembourg, 124 deaths, 204 per million;

Montenegro, 123 deaths, 197 per million;

Monaco, 4 deaths, 103 per million;

The Bahamas, 69 deaths, 179 per million;

Virgin Islands (U.S.), 19 deaths, 178 per million;

Guam, 28 deaths, 169 per million;

Suriname, 95 deaths, 165 per million;

St Martin (French part), 6 deaths, 161 per million;

Mayotte, 40 deaths, 148 per million;

Bermuda, 9 deaths, 141 per million;

Turks and Caicos Islands, 5 deaths, 133 per million;

Cabo Verde, 46 deaths, 85 per million;

Guyana, 58 deaths, 74 per million;

Sao Tome and Principe, 15 deaths, 71 per million;

Maldives, 33 deaths, 64 per million;

Djibouti, 61 deaths, 64 per million;

Belize, 22 deaths, 57 per million;

Guadeloupe, 20 deaths, 52 per million;

Martinique, 18 deaths, 49 per million;

Northern Mariana Islands, 2 deaths, 35 per million;

British Virgin Islands, 1 death, 34 per million;

Malta, 16 deaths, 33 per million;

Antigua and Barbuda, 3 deaths, 31 per million;

Iceland, 10 deaths, 28 per million;

Saint Vincent and the Grenadinese, 3 deaths, 27 per million;

Liechtenstein, 1 death, 26 per million;

Barbados, 7 deaths, 24 per million;

Réunion, 15 deaths, 17 per million;

Cayman Islands, 1 death, 16 per million;

Comoros, 7 deaths, 8 per million;

French Polynesia, 2 deaths, 7 per million;

Brunei, 3 deaths, 7 per million;

Curaçao, 1 death, 6 per million;

Fiji, 2 deaths, 2 per million;

For some countries no calculation could be done. These were Burma (39 deaths), Montserrat (1 death), Taiwan (7 deaths) and Western Sahara (1 death).