Meteorological Aerodrome Report (METAR)

Definition

A METAR is an aviation weather report that provides the current, observed meteorological conditions at an aerodrome. It is updated every hour (routine METAR), or as needed (special METAR – SPECI), and is used by pilots, dispatchers, and air traffic controllers for real-time weather assessment.
METARs are essential for preflight planning, in-flight updates, and runway and approach decision-making.

Purpose

  • Inform pilots of actual conditions at departure, enroute alternate, and destination airports
  • Support decisions on VFR vs. IFR, fuel planning, and alternate selection
  • Aid ATC in assigning runways and approach types
  • Evaluate if conditions meet landing/takeoff minima

METAR Format Overview

A standard METAR includes:

  • Aerodrome ICAO identifier
  • Time of observation (UTC)
  • Wind speed and direction
  • Visibility
  • Significant weather phenomena
  • Cloud layers and coverage
  • Temperature and dew point
  • QNH (sea-level pressure)
  • Runway condition reports (optional)
  • Recent weather changes and trends

Example METAR

LOWW 081250Z 28010KT 9999 FEW020 SCT040 BKN080 17/10 Q1013 NOSIG

Decoded:

  • LOWW: Vienna International Airport
  • 081250Z: Observed on the 8th at 12:50 UTC
  • 28010KT: Wind from 280° at 10 knots
  • 9999: Visibility 10 km or more
  • FEW020 SCT040 BKN080: Few clouds at 2000 ft, scattered at 4000 ft, broken at 8000 ft
  • 17/10: Temperature 17°C, dew point 10°C
  • Q1013: Pressure 1013 hPa
  • NOSIG: No significant weather change expected in next 2 hours

METAR Components

CodeMeaning
KTWind speed in knots
9999Visibility ≥10 km
FEW/SCT/BKN/OVCCloud coverage levels
RA/SN/TSRain, snow, thunderstorm
QNH/QXXXXAtmospheric pressure at sea level
NOSIGNo significant changes expected
CAVOKCeiling and visibility OK (≥5,000 ft, no weather)
SPECISpecial report issued for sudden weather change

METAR vs. TAF

FeatureMETARTAF
TypeObservationForecast
FrequencyHourly (or as needed)6–8 hours, valid up to 30 hours
UseReal-time flight decisionsPlanning and alternate selection
FormatStatic snapshotPredictive sequence

Why METARs Matter

  • ✅ Provide a reliable snapshot of current flight conditions
  • ✅ Help verify actual weather matches or deviates from the forecast
  • ✅ Allow pilots to evaluate departure and destination safety
  • ✅ Support fuel and alternate decisions, especially under IFR

Phraseology Examples

  • “Wien Tower, copied latest METAR: visibility 3000 meters, broken clouds at 900 feet.”
  • “METAR indicates wind 220 at 12 knots, request runway 22.”

Pilot Tips

  • Always compare latest METAR and TAF
  • Use “CAVOK” to quickly assess favorable VFR conditions
  • Check for wind shifts, low clouds, or pressure drops indicating change
  • Practice reading raw METARs with LearnATC training tools






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