A Boeing 737 Max clipped the wings of two other jets as it parked at the Toronto Pearson Airport.
Video of the collision shows the Air Canada jet approaching what ground crew had taken to be a parking sport in between two other planes.
But the space was not big enough for the plane's wings, and they collided with the stationary aircraft.
The clip was shared on social media by the Breaking Aviation News & Videos account.
It's not clear when the video was taken or to what extent the three planes were damaged.
According to Flight Aware tracking, an Air Canada jet with the registration C-FGKN last flew passengers on Friday, October 10, when it traveled from Quebec City to Toronto.
The Daily Mail reached out to the Toronto Pearson Airport for comment on this story.
Air Canada declined to comment on the incident, citing an ongoing investigation.


The terrifying incident in Toronto emerged just days after two Delta Airlines passenger planes collided in a horror accident that ripped the wing off one jet.
The CRJ-900 regional jets - operated by Delta subsidiary Endeavor Air - were taxiing at low speed when they suddenly clipped each other at LaGuardia Airport in New York City about 9.56pm.
Miraculously, only a member of cabin crew was injured in the collision despite footage that showed an aircraft wing broken off.
All 85 passengers were deemed safe and deplaned to wait until they could be transferred to different flights.
Pictures taken in the aftermath of the collision show significant damage on the nose of one of the planes.
Crew members and passengers were seen standing on the tarmac with police.
The collisions are the latest mishaps in the aviation industry, which has faced mounting concerns amid widespread job cuts to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) under President Trump.
Whistleblowers at the FAA have been sounding the alarm for months over the potential ramifications of job cuts within the department.

There have been mounting concerns about the risk of accidents at airports across the nation as a result of federal cutbacks.
'Air traffic controllers cannot do their work without us,' an aeronautical data specialist impacted by the cuts told Politico back in February.
'To put it frankly, without our team... pilots would quite literally be flying blind,' the anonymous source added.
Earlier this year, a mid-air collision as an American Airlines flight came in to land at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport killed 67 people.
In addition to the fatal crash in Washington DC on January 29, a small plane carrying 10 people crashed in Alaska on February 6, and two private jets collided at the Scottsdale Airport on February 10, killing one individual and injuring four.