If you have ever found yourself down a late-night internet rabbit hole about aviation disasters, you have almost certainly landed on a stark, beige webpage with black Times New Roman text and a table of contents that looks like it was coded in 1997. That site is .
Let’s be honest: the site is ugly. Beige background. Black text. Blue, un-visited links. No CSS. No mobile responsiveness. In an era of parallax scrolling and glassmorphism, PlaneCrashInfo looks like a Geocities relic. planecrashinfo
And that is precisely why it works. The lack of polish conveys a strange authority. It feels like a dossier, not a blog. There are no ads for flight schools or credit cards. There is no algorithm suggesting "more crashes you might like." It is a library. You enter, you find your flight, you read, you leave—disturbed but informed. If you have ever found yourself down a
The site was founded by , an aviation enthusiast and systems engineer (often cited under the pseudonym "Ron R. from the NYC area"). What began as a personal spreadsheet in the early 1990s—a simple log of notable crashes—grew into a sprawling database. Ron’s stated mission was straightforward: To provide a complete, factual, and respectful record of every commercial airplane accident with a fatality count, from the early days of flight to the present. Beige background
Disclaimer: As of 2025, the site remains online but is not actively maintained for new accidents post-2020. Check Aviation Safety Network for the most recent events.
For over two decades, this unassuming, almost deliberately ugly website has been the single most comprehensive, publicly accessible repository of commercial aviation accident data. It is a digital morgue, a historian’s goldmine, and a nervous flyer’s nightmare—all wrapped in HTML that has not been updated since the era of dial-up.


