Control Zone (CTR)

Definition

A Control Zone (CTR) is a volume of controlled airspace surrounding an airport that extends from the surface up to a defined upper limit (typically 2500 ft AGL, but this varies). It is established to protect aircraft during takeoff, landing, and low-level flight in the vicinity of controlled aerodromes.

Purpose

  • Ensure safe separation between arriving, departing, and transiting aircraft
  • Provide air traffic control service (usually Class D or Class C airspace)
  • Manage both IFR and VFR traffic in the airport environment
  • Prevent airspace infringements and mid-air conflicts in busy terminal areas

Key Characteristics

  • Extends from the ground to a specified altitude (unlike TMAs, which begin at higher levels)
  • Usually centered around controlled airports
  • Shapes can vary (circular, polygonal, or custom-shaped), based on geography and traffic needs
  • Normally belongs to Airspace Class D (VFR flights allowed with clearance)

CTR Entry Requirements

Flight Rules Required for Entry Notes
IFR ATC clearance, flight plan, 2-way radio Always controlled and separated
VFR ATC clearance required before entry Must establish 2-way contact first

Important: VFR aircraft may not enter a CTR without explicit ATC clearance, even if already in radio contact.

Phraseology Examples

  • “Linz Tower, OE-CVC, VFR request to enter control zone from the west at 2500 ft.”
  • “OE-CVC, Linz Tower, cleared to enter CTR via reporting point Sierra, not above 2500 ft.”
  • “Hold outside CTR, remain clear until further advised.”

Reporting Points

Many CTRs define visual reporting points (VRPs) to standardize VFR entry and exit routes. These are often named with ICAO-standard identifiers like Sierra, Whiskey, November, etc., and are marked on VFR charts. Pilots must report when passing these points if requested.

CTR vs. TMA

Feature CTR TMA
Starts at Ground level Above CTR, usually 2000–5000 ft AGL
Shape Compact, near airport Wider, multi-sector area
Purpose Final approach, departure Arrival and departure sequencing
Airspace class Often D Often C or D

Special VFR in CTR

  • In marginal weather, Special VFR (SVFR) may be granted inside a CTR:
  • Pilot remains VFR but below standard weather minima
  • Requires SVFR clearance from tower
  • Still subject to ATC separation from IFR traffic

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • ❌ Entering a CTR without a clearance
  • ❌ Assuming frequency contact equals permission
  • ❌ Flying over a CTR at low altitude without checking vertical limits
  • ✅ Always consult VFR charts for CTR boundaries and upper limits






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