Spontaneous CAPS Activations β No Pilot Input
Between April 24 and April 27, 2026, Cirrus Aircraft, Inc. received reports of fourteen confirmed spontaneous CAPS deployments across the United States involving SR-20, SR-22, and SR-22T airframes. None of the deployments were initiated by the pilots or passengers aboard. In every reported case, the aircraft were operating in normal flight conditions β cruise, pattern work, and instrument approaches β with no emergency situation present.
The parachute system activated without warning, without handle pull, and without any known mechanical trigger. All fourteen crews executed emergency landing procedures following deployment. There were no fatalities and no serious injuries reported in any of the fourteen incidents. Several aircraft sustained damage consistent with a CAPS landing β collapsed landing gear, propeller strike, and airframe stress loading β and are considered total losses pending insurance assessment.
Total confirmed spontaneous CAPS events: 14 (April 24β27, 2026)
Aircraft types affected: SR-20, SR-22 NA, SR-22T, Vision SF50 G3 β all Cirrus production aircraft utilizing the CAPS system
Pilot-initiated deployments in this period: 0
Injuries: None reported. All occupants exited aircraft normally following landing.
Aircraft losses: 9 of 14 aircraft considered unairworthy pending structural inspection. 5 aircraft sustained minor CAPS landing damage and may be repairable.
FAA Emergency Airworthiness Directive: E-AD-2026-09-14 issued April 27, 2026. Prohibits flight of all Cirrus SR-series aircraft pending compliance inspection.
How This Unfolded
What's Grounded. What's Flying.
Apex's 34 Cirrus aircraft represent the full Cirrus Pipeline β SR-20, SR-22 NA, SR-22T, and Vision SF50 G3. Every aircraft in this line is grounded effective April 27, 2026. All other Apex aircraft remain in service and are unaffected by Emergency AD 2026-09-14.
| Aircraft | Count | Status | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cirrus SR-20 | 15 | GROUNDED | Emergency AD 2026-09-14 |
| Cirrus SR-22 NA | 5 | GROUNDED | Emergency AD 2026-09-14 |
| Cirrus SR-22T | 10 | GROUNDED | Emergency AD 2026-09-14 |
| Cirrus Vision SF50 G3 | 4 | GROUNDED | Emergency AD 2026-09-14 β Cirrus CAPS system |
| Diamond DA-20 | 10 | FLYING | Unaffected |
| Diamond DA-40 NG | 40 | FLYING | Unaffected |
| Diamond DA-42 | 20 | FLYING | Unaffected |
| Turboprop & Jet Fleet | 16 | FLYING | Unaffected |
| All Other Aircraft | 39 | FLYING | Unaffected |
What This Means for Your Training
We understand the timing of this grounding is disruptive. The Cirrus Pipeline is one of Apex's most heavily enrolled programs, and we are committed to minimizing the impact on your progress. Here is exactly what we are doing and what you should do.
Our Position on CAPS
Apex has always held CAPS training as a cornerstone of Cirrus operations β not a checkbox, but a genuine safety system that our instructors teach students to respect, understand, and use correctly. The CAPS record speaks for itself: in over 100 documented intentional deployments since certification, there has not been a single fatality associated with a successful CAPS activation.
That record is precisely why these spontaneous activations are so alarming. A system that works exactly as designed when pulled should never activate without input. The fact that it did β in 14 separate aircraft, across multiple states, with no apparent common cause yet identified β is an airworthiness concern of the highest order and one we take with complete seriousness.
What we know: Fourteen spontaneous CAPS events occurred. No common weather condition, geographic area, aircraft age, or avionics configuration has been identified as the unifying factor. No pilot initiated any deployment. All occupants are safe.
What we don't know: The root cause. Cirrus Aircraft engineers, NTSB investigators, and the FAA's Aircraft Certification Office are working jointly on the investigation. Theories currently being examined include a potential fault in the CAPS activation relay system, electromagnetic interference from a specific avionics component, and a possible manufacturing defect in a CAPS handle cable assembly from a specific production batch. None of these has been confirmed.
Our commitment: Apex will not return a single Cirrus aircraft to service until the cause is identified, a corrective action is certified, and every aircraft in our fleet has been individually inspected and cleared. That is not negotiable. No schedule pressure, no customer request, and no financial consideration will change that position.
"I want to be direct with our students, our instructors, and our community. We grounded the fleet the moment the FAA Emergency AD was issued β and we would have grounded it before that if the voluntary advisory from Cirrus had come sooner. We did not wait. We did not debate it. We pulled the aircraft.
The Cirrus Airframe Parachute System is one of the most important safety innovations in general aviation history. It has saved lives. It will continue to save lives. But a parachute that deploys when you don't pull it is not a safety system β it's an airworthiness deficiency, and we are treating it as such.
We will keep you informed at every step of this investigation. When the fleet comes back, it will come back right β not fast."
What Happens From Here
Updates will be posted to the Apex student portal and sent via email as new information becomes available. You do not need to contact us to receive updates β you are already on the list.