“The pilot of a Kodiak 100 floatplane made a forced landing today in the East River, near Brooklyn, New York, around noon local time, causing a wing strut to break,” the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said in X.
The federal agency published a video from the specialized media FL360aero in which the ship was seen floating in the river in a vertical position and with a wing partially submerged, and disclosed that it had six passengers and two pilots on board.
“Air traffic controllers were not providing services to this small plane. The FAA will investigate,” the agency added.
The New York Fire Department told local media that the eight crew members were rescued by its emergency teams and two of them were evaluated on site for minor injuries.
The seaplane fell upright in the water, near Lower Manhattan, and was taken to a dock by authorities, CBS added.
The accident occurred after a day of intense traffic in the city’s rivers due to a naval concentration with dozens of military ships and large historic sailboats on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the United States, celebrated on Saturday, although today the waters returned to normal.
Three weeks ago a very similar event occurred, in which another seaplane crashed in the same river with no injuries reported.
A seaplane made a hard landing on New York’s East River on Sunday, according to the NYPD.
Police say all eight people on board, including the two pilots, were rescued; one suffered a minor injury. pic.twitter.com/YSgo2gKaIl
— Breaking Aviation News & Videos (@aviationbrk) July 5, 2026
#BreakingMinute | At least 10 people were rescued after a seaplane crashed in the East River in New York. According to the Fire Department, the aircraft made a forced landing in the water. No injuries reported. 🙏✈️
📹: FL360aero pic.twitter.com/A4KRinVyO7
— Quadratín Hispano (@HispanoQ) July 5, 2026
🇺🇸 | A plane crashes into the East River in New York City. At least 10 people have been rescued. pic.twitter.com/l4pSh9YaXK
— HerQles in America (@HerQlesAmerica) July 5, 2026
