FAA Probes Close Call Between Two Passenger Jets at New York’s JFK Airport

The Federal ‌Aviation Administration said on Tuesday it was investigating a close call at New ‌York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport ⁠between two passenger jets.
Published: 4/21/2026, 11:52:32 PM EDT
FAA Probes Close Call Between Two Passenger Jets at New York’s JFK Airport
A sign marks the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) Boston Air Route Traffic Control Center in Nashua, New Hampshire, on Oct. 9, 2025. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

WASHINGTON—The Federal ‌Aviation Administration said on Tuesday it was investigating a close call at New ‌York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport ⁠between two passenger jets.

“The crew of Republic Airways Flight 4464 performed a go-around at John F. Kennedy ​International Airport after missing the intended approach path and flying too ⁠close to Jazz Aviation Flight 554, which was cleared to land on a parallel runway. Both flight crews responded to onboard alerts,” the FAA said in a statement about the Monday incident.

“The FAA is ‌investigating the ⁠event,” it added.

The two planes came within 350 feet vertically and ‌0.62 miles horizontally at their closest points, according to flight-tracking service Flightradar24.

The two planes ​went around and landed without incident, according to an ABC ​News affiliate. In the air traffic control ​audio, anti-collision alarms were heard blaring in the tower and cockpit, the ABC affiliate ⁠reported.

Controllers told pilots in both planes to take evasive actions and the initial landing was aborted before the jets eventually made safe landings, ​according to the report.

The pilots told ⁠the controllers they were responding to the RA ​alarm, or “resolution advisories”, which ​is ‌the most serious of the anti-collision warnings pilots can get, the report added.

Last month, New York’s LaGuardia airport witnessed ‌a deadly collision when an Air Canada Express jet struck ⁠a fire truck, killing the plane’s two pilots.

By Kanishka ‌Singh