Army casualties numbered 25 dead and 39 wounded.
Total British Army casualties amounted to 385,000 dead and wounded, with a further 180,488 made prisoner of war during the course of the conflict.
The Chilean Army casualties were 56 men dead and 124 wounded.
Army casualties were limited to one soldier with an injured toe.
Russian Army casualties, now conservatively estimated at 29 million, represented more than three-quarters of all Allied casualties in the war.
The Army casualties were caused primarily by booby traps and mines rather than gunfire.
German Fourth Army casualties for 21-31 July were approximately 30,000, excluding wounded whose recovery was to be expected in a reasonable time.
By the 1980s and early 1990s, British Army casualties in the conflict had dropped.
Various sources estimate Cuban Army casualties (killed or injured) to be in the thousands (between 2,000 and 5,000).
At the cost of some 5,000 British Army casualties, Wellington had succeeded in taking Badajoz.