Asteroid hurtling toward Earth? Odds for impact keep increasing
The chance of it actually having an impact is still quite slim.

The odds keep growing that an asteroid big enough to wipe out a city will collide with Earth in seven years, according to NASA.
But the chance of an actual impact is still quite slim.
NASA first discovered "2024 YR4," the 130-to-300-foot-wide asteroid, in December 2024, and found it only had roughly a 1 percent chance of impacting Earth on its trajectory, NewsNation's Los Angeles affiliate KTLA reported.
On Jan. 27, the asteroid surpassed a 1 percent chance of hitting Earth, an “important threshold,” according to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
“Currently, no other known large asteroids have an impact probability above 1%,” NASA said in a press release.
On Feb. 7, the asteroid's chances of hitting our planet grew to 2.3 percent, and as of Feb. 18, there's a 3.1 percent chance that 2024 YR4 will impact Earth on Dec. 22, 2032. This means the odds are now one in 32.
There is a 96.9 percent chance that the asteroid will miss Earth, though NASA said this rare asteroid has a significant risk now, rating it at Torino Scale 3, a ranking of potential impacts.
“In the unlikely event that 2024 YR4 is on an impact trajectory, the impact would occur somewhere along a risk corridor which extends across the eastern Pacific Ocean, northern South America, the Atlantic Ocean, Africa, the Arabian Sea, and South Asia,” JPL said in a release.
NASA said its James Webb Space Telescope will observe the asteroid in March 2025 “to better assess the asteroid’s size.”