A tragic hot-air balloon accident in southern Brazil has claimed the lives of at least eight people, marking the second deadly incident involving ballooning in the country within a week.
The ill-fated flight occurred on Saturday near Praia Grande, a picturesque coastal town in Santa Catarina state, known for its popularity as a ballooning destination.

The balloon, which was carrying 21 passengers, caught fire mid-air, plunging the group into chaos and horror. “Eight fatalities and 13 survivors,” Governor Jorginho Mello confirmed in a message posted on X (formerly Twitter).
Video footage taken by bystanders captured the horrifying moment the balloon burst into flames high above the rural landscape. In the clips, flames engulf the basket as it rapidly descends, while some passengers are seen leaping in desperate attempts to escape.
According to officials, the survivors were immediately rushed to various hospitals in the region. At Our Lady of Fatima Hospital, five people were treated—three were reported to be in stable condition with only minor injuries, and two were discharged shortly after receiving care. Updates on the condition of the remaining survivors have not yet been made public.
The cause of the blaze is still under investigation, though authorities have pointed to the balloon’s ignition system as the likely origin. Tiago Luiz Lemos, a police official in Praia Grande, said the pilot informed investigators that the fire started when a blowtorch, used to fuel the main flame of the balloon, malfunctioned inside the basket.

In an effort to avert complete disaster, the pilot attempted to bring the balloon down quickly and urged passengers to jump as it neared the ground. Unfortunately, not all were able to make the leap before the flames intensified.
Fire department spokesperson Zevir Cipriano Junior provided a grim breakdown of the fatalities: four victims died from burns, while the remaining four succumbed to injuries sustained during the fall. Witnesses recounted the terrifying scene. One onlooker, speaking to Razao newspaper, described seeing “two people falling, they were on fire, the basket broke off and the balloon fell.”
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva offered his condolences to the victims’ families and expressed national mourning in an official statement. The president’s message came as the nation grapples with back-to-back ballooning disasters; just days earlier, a woman lost her life during a similar excursion in São Paulo state.
With weather conditions reported as clear at the time of the accident, questions now turn to equipment failure, operational oversight, and potential lapses in safety protocols. As investigators begin piecing together the chain of events, many in Brazil’s ballooning industry are calling for stricter regulations and improved safety standards to prevent another tragedy from striking the skies.
What you should know
Eight people died and 13 survived after a hot-air balloon caught fire and crashed near Praia Grande, Brazil. The incident, triggered by a suspected blowtorch malfunction, is the second fatal ballooning accident in the country within a week. An investigation is underway to determine the exact cause.























