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FAA Rotorcraft Monthly Accident Briefing - March

  • Apr 4
  • 3 min read

Attached is the Rotorcraft Monthly Accident Briefing for March 2026 (sixth month of FY26).

(Covers Part 27, Part 29, and Restricted Category rotorcraft accidents to U.S. registered aircraft. Does not include gyrocopters or experimental aircraft.)

 

Please access the information from this briefing directly anytime at the FAA’s publicly available, Rotorcraft Accident Dashboard.

Find “Dashboard Navigation” near the top of the default page and click either “Historical Briefing”, “USHST Metrics”, or “Make Model Breakdown” for access to all 4 pages of visualized and interactive data.

 

Monthly Summary

March Totals:  9 accidents, 3 fatal accidents, 5 fatalities

- The three fatal accidents in March were to three different industry sectors: Utilities Patrol/Construction, Instructional/Training, and Air Tour/Sightseeing.

- The nine total accidents during the month were to eight different industry sectors with only Personal/Private having more than one accident.

 

FY26 Summary

FY26 Totals:  37 accidents, 11 fatal accidents, 20 fatalities

 

Accidents (includes both fatal & non-fatal accidents):

- The FY26 estimated accident rate for Oct-Mar was 2.6 per 100K hours (19% lower than the same period in FY25 and 25% lower than the 5-year average for the same period).

- Distribution of accidents by Operating Part so far in FY26:

  -- Part 91 – 67%, Part 133 – 6%, Part 135 – 19%, Part 137 – 3%. Remaining accidents: 6% operated as Public Use aircraft.

- The 37 accidents in FY26 have occurred in nine different industry sectors. The top three percentages to date were: 1) Personal/Private: 38%, 2) Helicopter Air Ambulance: 19%, 3) Aerial Observation: 11%

 

Fatal Accidents:

- The FY26 estimated fatal accident rate for Oct-Mar was 0.77 per 100K hours (12% lower than the same period in FY25 and 12% higher than the 5-year average for the same period).

- Distribution of fatal accidents by Operating Part so far in FY26:

   -- Part 91 – 55%, Part 133 – 9%, Part 135 – 27%, Part 137 – 0%. Remaining fatal accidents: 9% operated as Public Use aircraft.

- The 11 fatal accidents in FY26 have occurred in the following six industry sectors: 1) Personal/Private: 36%, 2) (tie) Helicopter Air Ambulance & Utilities Patrol/Construction: each w/18%, 3) (tie) Air Tour/Sightseeing, Instructional/Training, Law Enforcement: each w/9%

 

Fatalities:

- The FY26 estimated occupant fatality rate for Oct-Mar was 1.41 per 100K hours (20% lower than the same period in FY25 and 4% lower than the 5-year average for the same period).

- Through 6 months, 30% of the rotorcraft accidents in FY26 had a fatality (long term historical percentage is 17-18%).

- Distribution of fatalities by Operating Part so far for FY26:

   -- Part 91 – 65%, Part 133 – 5%, Part 135 – 20%, Part 137 – 0%. Remaining fatalities: 10% operated as Public Use aircraft.

 

U.S. Helicopter Safety Team (USHST) Calendar Year Metrics

The USHST’s 5-year goals for 2025-2029 are based on individual 14 CFR Operating Parts, tracked by the 5-year average fatal accident rates per 100K hours.

14 CFR Part

Baseline, CY2018-2022 (per 100K hours)

Goal, CY2025-2029 (per 100K hours)

Progress, CY2022-2026 (per 100K hours)

91

0.81

0.73

(10% reduction)

0.49

133

1.73

1.56

(10% reduction)

0.83

135

0.33

0.17

(50% reduction)

0.42

137

1.11

1.00

(10% reduction)

1.18

USHST uses the following as conditions for the fatal accidents included in rate calculations.

  1. U.S. registered aircraft

  2. Operating in the U.S./U.S. territories (includes offshore)

  3. Not operating as Public Aircraft (public use)

 


Lee Roskop

Aviation Safety Coordinator (Rotorcraft)

Fleet Safety Section, AIR-723

U.S. Department of Transportation

(817) 222-5337

lee.roskop@faa.gov

 

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