The decision point depends on the approach type. On a precision approach (ILS), you have a
Decision Altitude (DA), typically 200 feet above the aerodrome elevation. At
DA, you must decide: land or go around. On a non-precision approach (NDB, VOR), you descend to a
Minimum Descent Altitude (MDA), which is higher, often 500 feet or more. You level off at
MDA and continue to the
Missed Approach Point (MAPt). The
MAPt is the point along the approach at which, if you have not established the required visual reference, you must initiate the missed approach procedure. On a precision approach,
MAPt coincides with
DA. On a non-precision approach,
MAPt is defined by a fix (DME distance, VOR radial crossing, or timing from the final approach fix). You brief this before descent: "We will not land if we do not see the runway by [altitude/
MAPt]."