A total of fifteen Tu-124s were written off in crashes during the type's operational career; another two aircraft of Iraqi Airways were destroyed on the ground during the
Gulf War.
1960s ;21 August 1963 :
Aeroflot Flight 366, a Tu-124 (CCCP-45021), ditched in the Neva River in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) after both engines failed due to fuel exhaustion while the crew was preoccupied with landing gear problems; all 52 on board survived. ;8 March 1965 :
Aeroflot Flight 513, a Tu-124 (CCCP-45028), stalled and crashed shortly after takeoff from
Kuybyshev Airport, killing 30 of 39 on board. ;11 November 1965 :
Aeroflot Flight 99, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45086), crashed on the frozen Lake Kilpyavr after the pilot mistook lights near
Murmansk Airport for the runway threshold lights, killing 32 of 64 on board. ;13 June 1966 :An Aeroflot Tu-124 (CCCP-45017) overran a wet runway on landing at Minsk-1 International Airport and was written off; no casualties. ;27 July 1966 :Aeroflot Flight 67, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45038), went into a dive over
Zaporizhzhia Oblast after flying into a storm at . The crew were able to regain control at and landed safely at Simferopol, but one passenger died (of 90 on board) and several more were injured during the incident. The aircraft was repaired and returned to service, but was lost in the crash of
Aeroflot Flight 5484 in 1979. ;7 March 1968 :Aeroflot Flight 3153, a Tu-124 (CCCP-45019), crashed on takeoff from Volgograd Airport after the crew accidentally activated the spoilers, killing a crew member; all 44 passengers survived. The spoiler switch had been poorly placed on the control column, allowing the pilot to hit it by accident.
1970s ;29 January 1970 :
Aeroflot Flight 145, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45083), struck a hillside while on approach to Kilpyavr Airport, Murmansk; of the 38 on board, five died on impact and another six died in the freezing temperatures while waiting for rescue. ;18 August 1970 :CSA Flight 744, a Tu-124V (OK-TEB), landed wheels-up at Kloten Airport after the pilot, preoccupied with a cabin pressurization problem, failed to hear the command to lower the landing gear; all 20 on board survived. The gear warning system alarm had been turned off. ;2 September 1970 :
Aeroflot Flight 3630, a Tu-124 (CCCP-45012), crashed near Dnepropetrovsk (now
Dnipro) following an unexplained loss of control, killing all 37 on board. ;9 July 1973 :Aeroflot Flight 5385, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45062), suffered an uncontained failure of the right engine shortly after takeoff from Kuybyshev Airport. Debris from the engine penetrated the fuselage, killing two passengers and injuring another four. The crew began an emergency descent and the engine was shut down. Panicking passengers moved to the front of the cabin, causing the center of gravity to move forward, but flight attendants were able to get the passengers seated and the aircraft was able to land safely at Kuybyshev. The aircraft was repaired and returned to service. ;20 November 1973 :An Aeroflot Tu-124V (CCCP-45031) overran a snow-covered runway on landing at Kazan Airport; no casualties. ;16 December 1973 :
Aeroflot Flight 2022, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45061), went into a spiraling dive at while descending for Moscow due to a short circuit in the elevator trim system. Although the crew were able to pull out and regain control at around , control was lost again due to a failed gyro and spatial disorientation and the aircraft crashed near Karacharovo, killing all 51 on board. ;23 December 1973 :Aeroflot Flight 5398, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45044), crashed near
Vinniki when a defective turbine blade in the no. 1 engine failed, resulting in violent vibration of the affected engine. The vibrations caused the fuel line to break. The resulting in-flight fire caused a loss of control resulting in the plane's crash and loss of all 17 on board. ;3 January 1976 :
Aeroflot Flight 2003, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45037), crashed shortly after takeoff from Vnukovo Airport due to a loss of control following instrument failure after entering clouds, killing all 61 on board; one person on the ground also died when the aircraft struck several homes ;5 November 1977 :Indian Air Force Tu-124K
V643, named
Pushpak Rath (Floral Chariot), crashed in a paddy field near
Jorhat after descending too low during the second attempt to land, killing five crew; Prime Minister
Morarji Desai is among the survivors. ;1977 :Soviet Air Force Tu-124Sh
53 red landed wheels-up at
Lugansk Airport after the pilot forgot to lower the landing gear; no casualties. ;29 August 1979 :
Aeroflot Flight 5484, a Tu-124V (CCCP-45038), went into a spin, broke apart in mid-air, and crashed near
Kirsanov after a flap was accidentally extended, killing all 63 on board. This crash is the deadliest involving the Tu-124, and Aeroflot retired it afterwards.
1990s ;February 1991 :Two
Iraqi Airways Tu-124Vs (YI-AEY and YI-AEL) were destroyed on the ground at Saddam International Airport by US or allied bombs during the Gulf War. == Aircraft on display ==