Most people have never been on a flight that declared an emergency. That gap between assumption and lived experience is where most of the fear lives.

The reality is far less dramatic than the headlines suggest. An emergency landing is a deliberate, structured decision made by a trained flight crew not a loss of control. Understanding exactly what happens from the moment a fault is identified to the moment the aircraft stops will permanently change how you think about flying.

What Is an Emergency Landing and Why It Differs From a Crash

emergency landing

An emergency landing is any unplanned landing made outside of a scheduled destination. The captain declares one when continuing to the next airport would place the aircraft, crew, or passengers at unacceptable risk.

It is categorically different from a crash. A crash is an uncontrolled, unintended impact. An emergency landing is a controlled, intentional decision  one the crew trained for hundreds of times in a simulator before ever facing in the air.

There are three distinct types. Each carries very different causes, frequencies, and outcomes:

Type

What Triggers It

How Common

Typical Outcome

Precautionary landing

Medical emergency, minor warning, unusual smell

Most common by far

Normal taxi to gate, passengers rebook

Forced landing

Engine failure, hydraulic loss, structural damage

Uncommon

Runway landing, aircraft grounded for inspection

Ditching

No reachable land runway within gliding distance

Rare

Water landing with immediate evacuation

Precautionary landings account for the vast majority of emergency declarations in commercial aviation. In most cases, passengers deplane normally, collect bags, and rebook  with little sense of how close the word "emergency" came to describing their flight.

What Triggers an Emergency Landing: Verified Causes and 2025 Data

The Six Most Common Causes on Commercial Flights

Pilots declare emergencies for a much broader and mostly routine set of reasons than most passengers imagine. Here are the most frequent triggers, from most to least common:

  • Medical emergency on board  the leading cause of commercial flight diversions globally. Under 14 CFR Part 91.3, the pilot-in-command may deviate from any ATC clearance or FAA regulation to the extent required by an emergency. A passenger in cardiac arrest justifies an immediate diversion.

  • Engine warning or anomaly  a caution light, oil pressure drop, or vibration signal. All twin-engine commercial jets are certified under FAA regulations to fly and land safely on a single engine. The declaration is immediate regardless of actual risk level.

  • Smoke or fire indication  any confirmed or suspected smoke in the cabin, cockpit, or cargo hold triggers instant diversion. Aviation procedure treats smoke as fire until engineers confirm otherwise on the ground.

  • Hydraulic system failure  hydraulics control flaps, landing gear, spoilers, and brakes. A partial failure is manageable. Total hydraulic loss is a serious emergency requiring priority routing.

  • Cabin pressurization failure  loss of pressure at cruising altitude forces a rapid descent to below 10,000 feet and immediate diversion to the nearest suitable airport.

  • Fuel emergency  when reserves approach minimum legal levels due to weather holds, unexpected rerouting, or sustained ATC delays, the crew declares a fuel emergency to receive absolute landing priority.

What the 2025–2026 Global Data Actually Shows

The IATA 2025 Annual Safety Report, released in March 2026, gives the most current picture of commercial aviation safety available. Key figures:

  • Airlines operated 38.7 million flights globally in 2025

  • There were 51 total accidents  fewer than the 54 recorded in 2024

  • The global all-accident rate improved to 1.32 per million flights (one accident per 759,646 flights), down from 1.42 in 2024

  • There were 8 fatal accidents in 2025, resulting in 394 onboard fatalities

  • Two accidents  Air India Flight 171 and PSA Airlines Flight 5342  accounted for over 77% of all onboard fatalities in the entire year

  • Notably, there were zero loss-of-control-in-flight (LOC-I) accidents in 2025  only the second time this has been achieved in the industry's history

  • The five-year rolling fatal accident rate has improved to one fatal accident per 5.6 million flights (2021–2025), versus one per 3.5 million flights a decade ago (2012–2016)

The critical context: the most common accident categories in 2025 were tail strikes, landing gear events, and runway excursions  events that occur predominantly during approach and landing, almost entirely survivable, and entirely distinct from in-flight emergencies. Airport infrastructure was a contributing factor in 16% of 2025 accidents, highlighting that runway safety areas and obstacle clearance remain ongoing industry priorities.

The gap between perception and data is wide. 2025 felt dangerous because of dramatic viral footage and high-profile incidents. The actual accident rate improved year-over-year.

How Pilots Execute an Emergency Landing: Step by Step

This is the exact sequence from fault identification to aircraft stop. Nothing in this process is improvised.

Step 1  Identify and Cross-Check the Fault

The crew identifies the problem using instruments, warning lights, sound, smell, and physical sensation. Cross-checking is mandatory  a single instrument reading is never acted on in isolation. The co-pilot independently verifies before any emergency action is taken.

Step 2  Run the Emergency Checklist

Every certified aircraft type carries Emergency and Abnormal Checklists  precise, sequential documents specifying every action required for every failure mode. These checklists are built from decades of accident investigation data. The crew works through them line by line. No step is performed from memory on an emergency checklist.

Step 3  Declare the Emergency to ATC

The captain contacts Air Traffic Control using one of two internationally standardized radio calls:

Declaration

When Used

Immediate ATC Response

MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY

Life-threatening distress requiring immediate assistance

All traffic cleared, absolute priority, emergency services pre-positioned on runway

PAN-PAN PAN-PAN PAN-PAN

Urgent but not immediately life-threatening

Priority routing, advisory support, services placed on standby

Both declarations are repeated three times by international ICAO convention. The crew simultaneously provides ATC with: nature of the emergency, number of people on board, remaining fuel, and requested diversion airport.

Step 4  Coordinate With ATC and Emergency Services

ATC immediately clears the airspace around the aircraft and assigns a direct path to the nearest suitable runway. Fire trucks, ambulances, and crash rescue vehicles are pre-positioned before the aircraft arrives. No other aircraft is permitted to land or take off on that runway until the emergency is resolved.

Step 5  Brief the Cabin Crew

The captain contacts the lead flight attendant by interphone. The brief ranges from a calm advisory ("we're diverting, expect a normal landing") to a full emergency preparation sequence including brace command preparation, exit door assignments, and evacuation instructions.

Step 6  Secure the Cabin

Flight attendants stow loose items, seat all passengers, and brief exit-row occupants individually  a legal requirement under FAA regulations. If evacuation is possible, they assign crew members to each door. Passengers are told to buckle up tight and stow all items.

Step 7  Land the Aircraft

The approach is modified based on the fault. If flaps are unavailable, the aircraft approaches faster and needs more runway. If landing gear is damaged, a belly landing follows a highly practiced simulator drill. In all cases, the crew selects the longest available runway and communicates every configuration change to ATC.

Step 8  Evacuate or Taxi?

After stopping, the captain makes the critical post-landing decision: deploy evacuation slides or taxi to a gate.

Most emergency landings end with a normal gate taxi. Slides are deployed only with confirmed fire, smoke, or structural damage. Deploying slides unnecessarily causes injuries  passengers suffer fractures and sprains at the bottom of slides in normal exits. The captain observes from the cockpit windows and makes this call within seconds.

Emergency Landing Safety: What 2025–2026 Data Confirms

The numbers from verified 2025 sources establish a clear picture. IATA's 2025 Annual Safety Report recorded 394 total onboard fatalities across all 38.7 million commercial flights worldwide. Of those, two accidents alone  both exceptional events  caused over 77% of the year's deaths.

That means for the 38.7 million flights that did not involve those two accidents, the effective fatality rate was extraordinarily close to zero.

The long-term trajectory is even clearer:

Period

Fatal Accidents per 5-Year Average

Fatalities (5-Year Average)

2012–2016

1 per 3.5 million flights

Higher

2021–2025

1 per 5.6 million flights

198 avg

2025 alone

8 fatal accidents / 38.7M flights

394 (concentrated in 2 events)

The 2025 fatality number looks elevated but is structurally misleading. Two catastrophic outlier events drove it. The underlying accident rate and long-term trend both improved.

For nervous flyers specifically, the safety record of US major carriers is even stronger. The guide on whether United Airlines is safe breaks down the US-specific data in detail, including on-time performance, incident history, and how the carrier compares to global peers.

What Passengers Should Do During an Emergency Landing

Most passengers will never need to do more than sit still and follow crew instructions. But knowing the specific steps for each phase eliminates the freeze response that costs critical seconds in a real evacuation.

Before the Approach Begins

  • Buckle your seatbelt the moment the crew announces any diversion or emergency

  • Stow your laptop, water bottle, tablets, and all loose items  they become projectiles at 150 mph during rapid deceleration

  • Read the safety card for your specific aircraft  exit locations vary by aircraft type, not just airline

  • Identify your two nearest exits, including one behind you  one may be blocked after landing

During the Approach

  • Keep your seatbelt tight, not just fastened

  • Put your phone away entirely

  • If the crew commands "brace"  adopt the brace position immediately without hesitation

The Brace Position: Why It Works

A 2015 FAA study confirmed that the brace position significantly reduces the risk of head and neck injuries during impact. The research following the 1989 Kegworth crash, where improper bracing contributed to 47 fatalities, led to the standardized positions in use today. Post-Kegworth studies showed correct bracing reduces spinal fractures by approximately 60% during hard landings.

The correct position for a forward-facing seat: bend forward at the waist, press your head against the seat in front or toward your knees, place your hands on the back of your head or behind your ankles, and keep your feet flat on the floor slightly behind your knees. Hold until the aircraft comes to a complete stop.

During the Miracle on the Hudson in 2009, all 155 passengers survived a dual-engine failure and water ditching, partly because the crew issued the brace command early and passengers complied.

If Evacuation Is Ordered

  • Leave everything  every bag, every laptop, every duty-free purchase

  • Move to the nearest usable exit  crew will direct you if it changes

  • Jump onto the slide feet-first, arms crossed over your chest

  • Move away from the aircraft immediately and keep moving

Passengers who carry baggage onto evacuation slides injure both themselves and the people below them. Multiple post-incident investigations, including the 2019 Aeroflot SU1492 fire in Moscow which killed 41 people, found that passengers who retrieved overhead bags directly delayed evacuation for others. The bag is not worth it.

For broader airport preparation, the airport tips and hacks guide covers what to do when your flight diverts unexpectedly  from locating gate agents to rebooking options and baggage retrieval.

After the Emergency Landing: What Happens Next

Immediate (0–30 minutes): The aircraft stops and is either evacuated via slides or taxied to a remote stand. Emergency services conduct an exterior inspection. Paramedics board immediately if a medical emergency triggered the diversion.

Short-term (30 minutes–4 hours): Passengers are transported to the terminal. The airline opens a customer service operation at the diversion airport and begins rebooking on the next available flight to the original destination.

Aircraft inspection: The aircraft does not fly again until cleared by maintenance engineers. Timeline ranges from two hours for a simple inspection to several days for parts or structural repair.

Your passenger rights: You are entitled to rebooking at no additional cost. If the diversion was caused by mechanical failure, you may have additional compensation rights under the airline's contract of carriage. The United Airlines delay compensation guide explains how compensation claims work for one major US carrier the same principles apply across US domestic operators.

Your baggage: Checked bags travel with your rebooking in most cases. When they separate during a diversion, the airline's baggage claim process applies. Our guide to United Airlines lost or delayed baggage explains how to file and track a claim if your bags don't make the rebook.

Conclusion

An emergency landing is not a near-death experience. It is a highly trained system working exactly as designed.

From the moment the captain identifies a fault, every person in that chain  the co-pilot cross-checking instruments, the flight attendant briefing exit rows, the ATC controller pre-positioning fire trucks, the engineers waiting on the ground  has drilled this exact scenario hundreds of times. The checklist exists. The procedure works.

The 2025 global data confirms it. Airlines completed 38.7 million flights. Fifty-one resulted in accidents. Eight were fatal  and two of those accounts for the vast majority of all deaths. The long-term trajectory, across two decades and hundreds of millions of flights, shows a safety record that no other form of mass transportation has matched.

When you board a commercial flight, you are stepping into the safest environment for long-distance travel that has ever existed. An emergency landing, should you ever experience one, is proof that the system is working.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an emergency landing and a plane crash?

A plane crash is an uncontrolled, unintended impact with the ground, water, or another object. An emergency landing is a deliberate, controlled decision by the flight crew to land at an unscheduled location. The crew is in command throughout. The overwhelming majority of emergency landings end with all passengers and crew walking off the aircraft unharmed.

How often do emergency landings happen on commercial flights?

Emergency declarations occur hundreds of times per year across US commercial aviation, though most never appear in the news. The FAA estimates approximately 150 declared emergencies per year specifically on commercial operations  the vast majority are precautionary, triggered by medical situations, minor technical alerts, or fuel considerations. Very few result in any passenger injury.

Is flying still safe given all the incidents in 2025?

Yes. The IATA 2025 Annual Safety Report, published in March 2026, recorded an all-accident rate of 1.32 accidents per million flights  an improvement from 1.42 in 2024. Of 38.7 million flights globally, 51 resulted in accidents. Two events accounted for over 77% of all fatalities. The five-year rolling fatal accident rate has improved from one per 3.5 million flights (2012–2016) to one per 5.6 million flights (2021–2025). The perception of increasing danger is driven by viral footage, not by deteriorating safety.

What does MAYDAY mean versus PAN-PAN in aviation?

MAYDAY  repeated three times  signals a life-threatening distress condition requiring immediate assistance. It gives the aircraft absolute priority: ATC clears all traffic, emergency services deploy to the runway, and no other aircraft may use that runway. PAN-PAN  also repeated three times  signals an urgent situation that is serious but not immediately life-threatening. The crew receives priority routing and advisory support but without the full emergency mobilization.

Does the brace position actually work?

Yes, and it is supported by specific research data. A 2015 FAA study confirmed the brace position significantly reduces head and neck injuries in impacts. Research following the 1989 Kegworth crash showed that standardized bracing reduces spinal fractures by approximately 60% during hard landings. During the 2009 Miracle on the Hudson ditching, all 155 people on board survived partly because the crew issued the brace command early and passengers complied. The position is not theatrical  it is a structural intervention that works.

Can a commercial plane land safely with only one engine?

Yes. All commercial twin-engine aircraft (which includes virtually every major airline jet) are certified under FAA regulations to sustain flight and complete a safe landing with a single engine. This is called ETOPS certification  Extended-range Twin Operations  and it requires demonstrated safe single-engine performance. Airline pilots train for single-engine approaches in simulators multiple times per year. Engine loss on a commercial flight is taken seriously and triggers an immediate emergency declaration, but the outcome is reliably safe.