Taiwan’s Indigenous Defence Fighters (pictured in a file image here) were scrambled in response.
Two Chinese military aircraft violated Taiwan’s airspace on Monday, officials said, causing Taiwan to scramble jets.
Taiwan said Chinese Y-8 maritime patrol planes entered the island’s ADIZ (air defence identification zone) in both the morning and the afternoon.
Taiwan scrambled planes which “followed them closely to make sure they left”, an air force spokesman said.
The alleged incident came days after the US accused a Chinese plane of dangerous manoeuvres near its aircraft.
Washington said the Chinese aircraft came within 10 metres of a US Navy patrol plane over international waters off Hainan Island on 19 August.
China described the claims as “groundless”, saying the pilot’s conduct was “professional”.
In the latest incident, Taiwan said the two Chinese planes violated its airspace twice each as they flew towards the South China Sea and back.
Mirage 2000-5s and Indigenous Defence Fighters were scrambled in response, officials said.
In a statement to Reuters news agency, China’s defence ministry said its planes had carried out a “routine flight” in “relevant airspace”. There was no “abnormality”, the statement said.
Beijing considers Taiwan part of China but the two have been governed separately since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949.
Economic ties have improved significantly in recent years but on a political level the two remain far apart.
China, meanwhile, has in recent years been taking a more assertive stance over its territorial claims in both the East China and South China seas, sparking a rise in regional tensions.