Instrument Flight Rules (IFR)

Definition

Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) are a set of aviation regulations under which a pilot operates an aircraft primarily using instruments for navigation and control, rather than visual references. IFR is required when flying in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC) or in certain controlled airspace regardless of weather conditions. Pilots must be instrument-rated, and aircraft must be equipped and certified for IFR operations.

Purpose

  • Allow flight in poor visibility or cloudy conditions (IMC)
  • Enable safe navigation in high-traffic or controlled airspace
  • Provide positive ATC separation from other traffic and terrain
  • Standardize procedures for departures, enroute operations, and approaches

When IFR Is Required

  • In IMC (weather below VFR minima)
  • In Class A airspace (always IFR)
  • For airline and commercial transport flights
  • For instrument approaches and flights at night (in some jurisdictions)
  • When filing an IFR flight plan (mandatory for IFR)

IFR Flight Requirements

RequirementDescription
Pilot licenseMust hold an Instrument Rating (IR)
Aircraft equipmentMust include gyroscopic instruments, nav/com radios, transponder, and alternates
Flight planIFR flight plan must be filed and activated
ATC clearanceRequired before entering controlled airspace or departure under IFR
CommunicationContinuous two-way radio contact with ATC

IFR vs. VFR

FeatureIFRVFR
NavigationInstrumentsVisual references
ATC separationProvidedNot guaranteed
Weather requirementsIMC or VMCVMC only
Airspace accessAll classes (A–G)Restricted in some airspace
Pilot certificationInstrument rating requiredPrivate or commercial license
Typical useAirlines, IFR routes, IMCGeneral aviation, local flights

Phases of IFR Flight

Phraseology Examples

  • “Cleared to Munich via ROTAX 2N departure, climb FL90.”
  • “Descend to 3000 feet, expect ILS runway 08.”
  • “Maintain FL280, contact Vienna Radar on 132.1.”

IFR Flight Planning

  • Must include: departure, route, alternate airport, and fuel calculation
  • Requires filing at least 60 minutes before departure (domestically may vary)
  • ATC may issue amended routes or expected clearances
  • IFR flight plans are filed in ICAO format (FPL)

Tips for IFR Pilots

  • ✅ Keep charts, frequencies, and checklists ready and organized
  • ✅ Anticipate clearances and altitude changes
  • ✅ Practice hold entries, missed approaches, and diversions
  • ✅ Use LearnATC’s IFR modules to build fluency with clearances, STARs, and real-world navigation scenarios






Usamos cookies y localStorage para garantizar la funcionalidad de la aplicación. Lea más en nuestra Privacy Policy

Disminución