A new accident investigation by three countries has concluded that MS Estonia sank due to structural flaws, not an explosion or collision. The vessel was unfit for Baltic Sea traffic owing to a chain of failures in regulations, construction, and inspections. Survivors have mixed reactions to the report.
On December 16, 2025, accident investigation commissions from Sweden, Estonia, and Finland released findings from a new probe into the 1994 sinking of MS Estonia. The report dismisses theories of explosion or collision, confirming instead that the ship struck the seabed, causing hull breaches. Latent structural flaws in construction, coupled with inadequate regulations and inspections, rendered Estonia unfit for Baltic Sea service.
Urban Lambertsson, a survivor who represented the bereaved during the inquiry, criticizes the conclusions for lacking depth. 'Not at any point has any responsibility whatsoever been expressed,' he says, questioning why the shipyard is not held accountable despite evident design flaws from the outset. He had hoped for clearer accountability.
The investigation was prompted by a 2020 TV documentary by Henrik Evertsson, which fueled conspiracy theories. Jonathan Lindström, who lost both parents in the disaster, welcomes the report. 'It has been agonizing years... Now I hope we can have peace,' he says, noting that the original JAIC inquiry had already clarified the cause. He believes conspiracists are now sidelined, and the findings bolster future safety measures.
Despite differing views, the affected agree the tragedy has left deep scars, and the report provides some closure even as questions of responsibility persist.