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Home » Retiring Icelandair Pilot In Trouble For Startling Town With Surprise Flyover
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Retiring Icelandair Pilot In Trouble For Startling Town With Surprise Flyover

FlyMarshall NewsroomBy FlyMarshall NewsroomApril 13, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Yikes, well this is one way to end your career…

Icelandair pilot makes unauthorized flyover on final flight

Media in Iceland is reporting on an incident that happened on Saturday, April 11, 2026. It involves Icelandair flight FI521, the 3hr18min flight that was operating from Frankfurt (FRA) to Keflavik (KEF) with a Boeing 757-200 that had the registration code TF-ISR.

For the captain onboard, it was his final flight at the airline prior to retirement. It’s not unusual for there to be something special for pilots on their last flight, like a water cannon salute upon landing. However, this pilot took matters into his own hands.

On approach to Keflavik Airport, the captain decided to perform a low-level flyover of the town of Vestmannaeyjar, which is on the approach course to the airport. This was reportedly the town that the captain grew up in. Since there was no prior warning, this startled residents, as houses shook, given how much noise engines can generate.

The maneuver marked the captain’s final flight after 40 years of service flying over the trails of his youth.

The Icelandair B757 arriving from Frankfurt en route to Keflavík, descended toward the islands before climbing again, with Flightradar24 data showing a lowest recorded… https://t.co/vh2DWFlIMi pic.twitter.com/B2EonOVNVl

— Turbine Traveller (@Turbinetraveler) April 11, 2026

ICELANDAIR REPORTS OWN PILOT TO POLICE OVER LOW FLYOVER INCIDENT.
Icelandair has taken a serious stance after one of its pilots allegedly flew a Boeing 757 (TF-ISR) below permitted altitude, nearly 100 m/328 ft over Vestmannaeyjar, during his final flight before retirement.

The… pic.twitter.com/DwjzuV3L0z

— Turbine Traveller (@Turbinetraveler) April 11, 2026

Icelandair’s chief flight officer has made it clear that this incident is being taken seriously, and that “this was not done with any permission from us and it was done completely without our knowledge.” Airline operating policies aside, it’s also being investigated whether actual guidelines were broken in terms of the altitude at which planes can fly above the ground.

How low did the Icelandair plane actually get?

This flyover of Vestmannaeyjar happened over 20 minutes before the plane actually landed at Keflavik Airport. So while it was “on the way,” the plane descended significantly in order to do this flyover. So, how low did the plane actually get?

Flightradar24 data shows the plane at an altitude of 1,375 feet and speed of 144 knots around the town of Vestmannaeyjar. However, that likely wasn’t the plane’s lowest altitude or speed. That’s because the plane was flying by a cliff, and flight tracking briefly lost coverage of it.

When those numbers show (1,375 feet and 144 knots), you’ll also see the climb rate shows as being 1,472 feet per minute, so that means it wasn’t the lowest altitude the plane reached. After the flyover, the plane climbed back up to over 5,000 feet.

How reckless were the captain’s actions here? Flyovers and low passes can be performed in a way that’s totally safe, assuming no operational limits were exceeded. I think the bigger issue here is poor judgment in terms of communication. The people living in the town were startled, while something like this also shouldn’t done without a company’s permission. I hope that passengers were at least told what was going on?

Bottom line

A retiring Icelandair captain decided to do something special for his final flight, so he performed a flyover of the town he grew up in. This involved flying way lower and slower than this flight typically would, and it startled people in the town.

The airline is now investigating this incident, since it was done without company permission. While this maneuver likely wasn’t dangerous, I’m sure the airline views this as showing questionable judgment. Then again, if it was the guy’s last flight…

What do you make of this Icelandair pilot’s retirement flight flyover?


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