A Delta flight flipped upside down while landing at Toronto’s main airport

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  • Emergency crews responded to an incident with a Delta Air Lines flight in Toronto on Monday.
  • The Bombardier CRJ900 was flying from Minneapolis, operated by Delta’s Endeavor Air.
  • Delta said Monday evening 18 customers with injuries were transported to hospitals.

A Delta Air Lines jet flipped with 80 people on board as it landed at a Toronto airport Monday, leaving emergency crews scrambling to reach the injured in the upside-down aircraft.

All passengers and crew were “accounted for,” Toronto Pearson International Airport said. A Peel Regional Police spokesperson said the Greater Toronto Airports Authority was investigating.

Photos on X appeared to show the plane upside down and at least one wing missing. More photos of the wreck trickled out later. Delta said there were 76 passengers and four crew on board.


The wreckage of a Delta  Air Lines vlight that flipped at Toronto Pearson International Airport.

The wreckage of Delta Air Lines Flight 4819 from Minneapolis overturned at Toronto Pearson International Airport.

Mert Alper Dervis /Anadolu via Getty Images



“Initial reports were that there are no fatalities,” Delta said. “Several customers with injuries were transported to area hospitals. Our primary focus is taking care of those impacted.”

The company reiterated Monday evening there were no reported fatalities and said that 18 customers with injuries were transported to local hospitals.

Ornge, an air ambulance service in Ontario, told Business Insider that three people were transported to Toronto hospitals with critical injuries, including a child, a man in his 60s, and a woman in her 40s.

The Bombardier CRJ900, which was flying from Minneapolis as Flight 4819, was operated by Delta’s wholly-owned regional subsidiary, Endeavor Air.

Flights to the airport were halted due to the emergency, and there are no updates yet on when they may resume. The airport remains closed.


A photo taken through a fence of the wreckage of an overturned Delta Air Lines flight.

Another shot of the wreckage of Delta Flight 4819 at Toronto Pearson Airport.

Mert Alper Dervis /Anadolu via Getty Images



Delta said that it is working with customers flying from, to, or through Toronto and that customers should check their flight status via the Delta app.

US Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy said in an X post that investigators with the Federal Aviation Administration were traveling to Toronto and that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada would lead the investigation.

Canada’s transport minister Anita Anand thanked first responders and airport staff in an X post. In an earlier post, she said she had spoken to Duffy about the crash and that the FAA was sending investigators to support the Transportation Safety Board of Canada.

A bad few months for aviation safety

The Delta incident comes two and a half weeks after an American Airlines flight collided with a military Black Hawk helicopter over Washington D.C., killing 67 people.

The event in Toronto highlights the ongoing concerns over aviation safety. Despite the incident happening in Canada, the plane was operated by a US airline regulated by the FAA.

On Monday, the Trump Administration fired hundreds of FAA staff, according to the workers’ union, including people in the safety department.

Among those fired was Jason King, whose work directly involved addressessing safety concerns, the Washington television station, WUSA, reported.

He said his team’s work included investigating the mid-air collision over D.C.


The site of the DC plane crash with the US Capitol in the background.

The Trump Administration’s move to fire hundreds of FAA employees follows the fatal American Airlines crash in January.

Al Drago/Getty Images



The Delta and American flights join a string of aviation safety events since December. An Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer plane crashed on Christmas Day in Kazakhstan, with some blaming Russian air defenses. Thirty-eight people died.

A few days later, a Boeing 737 operated by the South Korean budget carrier Jeju Air crashed in South Korea. 179 people died, and two people survived.

A small general aviation plane crashed in Pennsylvania a few days after the American accident, killing six on the plane and one on the ground.

And on February 6, an Alaskan regional airline crashed in western Alaska, killing 10 people.



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