A holding procedure is a predetermined racetrack-shaped pattern flown by aircraft to maintain position while awaiting further clearance. It is typically used during delays, traffic sequencing, approach procedures, or when weather or airspace congestion prevents immediate continuation of flight. Holding patterns are defined in instrument procedures, but can also be assigned by ATC dynamically.
Three standard entries depending on your inbound heading:
The correct entry is chosen based on your bearing relative to the fix — ICAO or FAA rules may differ slightly.
Altitude | Max Holding Speed |
---|---|
≤ 14,000 ft | 230 knots IAS |
> 14,000 ft | 240–265 knots IAS (region-dependent) |
Speeds are regulated to ensure pattern containment and safe separation.
Example: “Hold over reporting point November at 2500 ft until cleared to enter CTR.”
Prolonged holding can be fuel-critical. Pilots must:
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