Cathay Pacific Flight CX509 Suffers Tail Strike at Hong Kong Airport

Cathay Pacific Airways (CX) confirmed that the tail of an Airbus A330-300 struck the runway at Hong Kong International Airport (HKG) on July 3, 2026, while the aircraft was performing a go-around. Flight CX509 was arriving from Tokyo’s Narita Airport (NRT) when poor weather forced the crew to abort their first landing attempt. The tail made contact with the runway surface during the manoeuvre, and the aircraft landed safely on a second attempt roughly 15 minutes later, South China Morning Post.

No injuries were reported among the crew or the passengers on board, and the aircraft taxied normally to its parking bay. Hong Kong’s Civil Aviation Department (CAD) has ordered Cathay Pacific to submit a report on the incident and is coordinating with the city’s Air Accident Investigation Authority (AAIA) to follow up.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

Go-Around In Poor Weather Leads to Tail Strike

Flight CX509 was on approach to runway 07R at 1:08pm local time when the crew initiated a go-around from very low height due to deteriorating conditions. Hong Kong was under an Amber Rainstorm Warning that afternoon as Tropical Storm Maysak brought squally showers and violent gusts to the region. During the go-around, the aircraft’s tail contacted the runway surface.

The Airbus A330-300, registered B-HLQ, climbed to 5,000 feet before repositioning for another approach. It landed safely on runway 07L about 15 minutes after the go-around. A Cathay Pacific spokesman confirmed:

“The aircraft subsequently landed safely at Hong Kong International Airport and was taxied to a parking bay where our passengers disembarked normally.”

The spokesman added that “there were no reports of injury among the operating crew or passengers on board” and that the airline’s engineering team was carrying out a thorough inspection ahead of required maintenance.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

Extensive Scraping Visible on Aircraft’s Rear Fuselage

Photographs obtained by the South China Morning Post show extensive scraping along the underside of the aircraft’s rear fuselage. The visible damage extends across a wide section of the lower tail structure, consistent with sustained contact against the runway surface during the aborted landing.

Warren Chim Wing-nin, deputy chairman of the Hong Kong Institution of Engineers’ aircraft division, said the damage appeared significant from the outside. “From the outside, it looks quite serious, but you still have to assess the internal aircraft structure before determining how severe the damage really is,” he said.

The aircraft involved is nearly 25 years old, having been delivered to Cathay Pacific in 2001, according to aircraft tracking site Planespotters.net. Its age makes it one of the older widebodies in the airline’s current fleet, though age alone is not considered a direct factor in tail strikes, which typically result from pitch and approach handling during landing or go-around manoeuvres.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

What Is a Go-Around and How Do Tail Strikes Happen

A go-around is a standard aviation procedure in which a pilot aborts a landing approach and climbs back up to attempt another landing. Pilots may call a go-around for many reasons, including poor visibility, unstable approach speed, or a runway that is not yet clear.

A tail strike occurs when the aft underside of an aircraft contacts the runway due to excessive nose-up pitch. Most tail strikes happen during landing rather than takeoff, and go-arounds carry particular risk because pilots must apply Take-Off/Go-Around (TOGA) thrust and pitch-up input simultaneously.

  • Pitch-limit protection: Airbus aircraft display pitch-limit cues on the Primary Flight Display below 400 feet and issue an audible “PITCH PITCH” alert if the pitch angle exceeds safe limits.
  • Boeing’s system: Boeing’s Tail-Strike Protection system, introduced on the 777-300ER, automatically adjusts elevator inputs during takeoff if it detects an excessive rotation rate.
  • Certification testing: Manufacturers deliberately test controlled tail strikes using a protective tail-skid to determine an aircraft’s Minimum Unstick Speed during certification.

Go-arounds require rapid, coordinated handling from flight crews, since autopilot and autothrust systems work together to deliver a sudden burst of climb power. Managing that pitch response precisely is critical to avoiding over-rotation and structural contact with the runway.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

Second Cathay Pacific Tail Strike Since November

This is not the first time a Cathay Pacific aircraft has suffered a tail strike during a go-around at its home airport. On November 26, 2025, an Airbus A350-1000, registered B-LXO and operating flight CX764 from Ho Chi Minh City (SGN), suffered a nearly identical incident while landing on runway 07C at HKG.

In that case, the aircraft began veering toward the left edge of the runway during its landing roll, prompting the crew to initiate a go-around. During the manoeuvre, the tail of the aircraft made contact with the runway surface, triggering an Electronic Centralized Aircraft Monitor “TAILSTRIKE” message in the cockpit.

The AAIA later found that the November strike had damaged the aircraft’s tail strike sensor, a toilet waste panel, and APU compartment vent pipes, along with abrasion to the lower fuselage skin. That A350 remained grounded in Hong Kong for at least 27 days while engineers carried out inspections and repairs.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

Comparing The Two Tail Strike Incidents

Detail CX509 (July 2026) CX764 (November 2025)
Aircraft type Airbus A330-300, B-HLQ Airbus A350-1000, B-LXO
Aircraft age Nearly 25 years About 4.8 years
Origin Tokyo Narita (NRT) Ho Chi Minh City (SGN)
Runway 07R (attempted), landed 07L 07C
Cause of go-around Poor weather conditions Aircraft veered toward runway edge
Time to second landing About 15 minutes Aircraft climbed to 6,000 feet before repositioning
Outcome Landed safely, no injuries Landed safely, no injuries
Aircraft status after Under inspection at time of writing Grounded for at least 27 days

Both incidents share the same underlying pattern: a go-around initiated during the landing phase, followed by tail contact with the runway before a safe second landing. The two aircraft involved sit at opposite ends of Cathay’s fleet age spectrum, suggesting the airline’s exposure to this failure mode is not confined to any single aircraft type or generation.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

A Difficult Week for Cathay Pacific’s Safety Record

The tail strike adds to a run of scrutiny facing Cathay Pacific this month. Just a day before news of the A330 incident broke, Hong Kong’s aviation regulator ordered the airline to submit a separate report after a London-bound Airbus A350-1000 briefly lost radio contact with air traffic control over Romania on July 4, prompting NATO to scramble Hungarian fighter jets.

Flight CX257, also an Airbus A350-1000, was carrying more than 300 passengers from Hong Kong International Airport to London Heathrow Airport (LHR) when it failed to establish contact with Romanian civil air traffic control. Hungary’s Defence Minister, Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi, said two Hungarian jets were scrambled under NATO’s Quick Reaction Alert protocol before radio contact was restored and the jets returned to base.

Cathay Pacific said the aircraft and its passengers were never in danger and that the flight adhered to its authorised route throughout the disruption. The airline confirmed the incident involved “a subsequent interception by the authorities in accordance with internationally recognised protocols”. Coming within days of the A330 tail strike, the NATO intercept has intensified regulatory attention on the carrier’s operational record.

Photo: Cathay Pacific

What Happens Next for the Investigation

The CAD has requested that Cathay Pacific submit a formal report on the CX509 tail strike and will continue to cooperate with the AAIA as the investigation proceeds. A CAD spokeswoman confirmed the department’s involvement, stating that Cathay had reported the incident through the established notification mechanism.

Cathay Pacific’s engineering team is inspecting the aircraft’s internal structure to determine the full extent of the damage before it returns to service. Based on the timeline of the November 2025 A350 tail strike, the A330 could remain grounded for several weeks depending on what the internal inspection finds. The AAIA’s full investigation into the November incident took roughly seven weeks to become public, suggesting a similar timeframe may apply to this case before more detailed findings emerge.

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