EXCLUSIVE INVESTIGATION  ·  316,000 incidents. 35 years. Here's what the data says.
An independent data investigation
RUNWAY RISK
The wildlife strike investigation airlines don't advertise
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Breaking Investigation

Every time you fly, there's a 1 in 7 chance your airport is in the top 15 most dangerous for bird strikes

We analyzed 316,839 wildlife strike incidents reported to the FAA over 35 years. What we found should change how you think about takeoff.

316K
Incidents analyzed
35
Years of FAA records
500%
Increase since 1990
The Big Picture

Bird strikes have exploded 500% since 1990. Here's why nobody talks about it.

FAA Wildlife Strike Database, 1990–2025 · 316,839 total incidents

In 1990, the FAA recorded fewer than 1,600 wildlife strikes on U.S. aircraft. By 2019 — before the pandemic briefly interrupted — that number had climbed past 17,000 per year. That's a 500% increase in three decades. And yet most passengers have no idea this is happening.

The dramatic rise isn't because birds are getting more aggressive. It's a combination of three factors: more flights, aircraft becoming quieter (birds can't hear them coming), and improved reporting systems that capture incidents that previously went unrecorded.

What you need to know

The COVID dip in 2020 briefly reduced strikes by nearly 50% as flights plummeted — the clearest proof that strike frequency directly tracks air traffic volume. As travel rebounded in 2022, so did strikes.

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89%
Strikes cause zero damage
Most birds simply bounce off. It's the 11% that don't that make headlines.
81K
Strikes happen on approach
Landing is your most dangerous moment. That's when aircraft are lowest and slowest.
4
Types of incidents our AI found
Machine learning identified 4 distinct risk profiles hiding in the data.
Airport Rankings

Is your airport on the list? The 15 most strike-prone airports in America — ranked.

Total reported wildlife strikes · FAA Database 1990–2025

Denver International holds a dubious crown: more wildlife strikes than any other American airport. But the list contains some surprises — and if you're flying through Atlanta, you might want to know where Hartsfield-Jackson lands.

# Airport State Total Strikes Strike Volume

"Denver's geography puts it at the intersection of major migratory flyways — it's not poor management, it's location."

— Analysis based on FAA Wildlife Strike Database
Quick Hits · Things that will surprise you
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The Culprits

The 15 bird species most likely to ruin your flight, ranked by how often they show up in FAA reports

Species frequency · FAA Database 1990–2025 · Known species only

The humble mourning dove — a bird you probably see in your backyard every morning — is the single most frequently identified species in the database with 16,236 recorded strikes. The American kestrel, barn swallow, and killdeer round out the top five known species.

Large birds like eagles and vultures are genuinely dangerous when they hit, but they're rare. The real volume comes from small, abundant species that flock near airports in huge numbers.

When It Happens

Landing is when you're most at risk. This chart explains exactly why.

Strikes by phase of flight · All 316,839 incidents

The Sully lesson

The 2009 "Miracle on the Hudson" happened during climb — the second most dangerous phase. Captain Sullenberger's plane hit a flock of Canada geese at 2,818 feet. The data shows climb accounts for 28,848 strikes in the database — nearly 1 in 10 of all incidents.

The Science

We built an AI that can predict whether a bird strike will damage your plane. It's accurate 82.6% of the time.

Machine learning regression model · Trained on 163,832 historical incidents

Using the same type of AI that powers fraud detection at banks, we trained a model on 35 years of FAA data. Given what we know about the aircraft, the airport, and the phase of flight — can we predict how badly a wildlife strike will damage a plane?

The answer, surprisingly, is yes. Our best model explains 82.6% of the variation in damage outcomes — far better than chance. And the most important predictor wasn't the bird's size, or the airport, or even the weather.

It was one simple question: was damage indicated immediately after the strike?

82.6%
Model accuracy (R²)
Explains variance in damage outcomes
0.25
Average prediction error
On a 0–4 damage scale
4
Models tested
Linear, Ridge, Lasso, Random Forest

"The fact that a simple linear model explains 82% of damage outcomes suggests the system is far more predictable than the aviation industry lets on."

— Runway Risk Data Team · Georgia Tech Analysis, 2026
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The Hidden Patterns

AI found 4 types of wildlife strike incidents hiding in 35 years of data. One is far more dangerous than reported.

K-Means clustering · 204,790 incidents · 4 distinct risk profiles identified

When you feed 200,000 wildlife strike records into a machine learning algorithm and ask it to find natural groupings — with no instructions about what to look for — what does it find?

Four distinct incident types emerge. Three are roughly what you'd expect. The fourth is surprising: a cluster of small aircraft at low altitude with a damage rate that's disproportionately high relative to how rarely these incidents make the news.

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Why Denver has more bird strikes than any other US airport — and what they're doing about it
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The "Miracle on the Hudson" was 15 years ago. Has anything actually changed?
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