Minimum Equipment List (MEL)

Updated at: 2025-12-01 12:08
The Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is an approved document that specifies which aircraft systems, instruments, and equipment may be inoperative for a flight to be legally dispatched, and under what conditions. It allows limited operation with certain defects while maintaining an acceptable level of safety and regulatory compliance.

1. Definition of Minimum Equipment List (MEL)

In aviation, a Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is an operator-specific document, approved by the aviation authority, that identifies which items of aircraft equipment may be inoperative for dispatch and the associated limitations, procedures, and conditions. It is derived from the manufacturers Master Minimum Equipment List (MMEL) but tailored to a particular operators fleet, routes, and procedures.
The MEL is legally binding for that operator and aircraft registration. When an item listed in the MEL is inoperative, the MEL provides the decision framework to determine whether the flight can depart, which additional actions are required, and what operational restrictions apply.
For student pilots, it is important to distinguish the MEL from the basic equipment requirements in the regulations (for example, day Visual Flight Rules (VFR) equipment lists). A formal MEL is usually used by commercial operators and larger aircraft, but the same logic of must-have versus dispatch with inoperative applies to all operations.

2. Purpose of the MEL

The primary purpose of the Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is to maintain an acceptable level of safety while providing operational flexibility when some aircraft equipment is inoperative. Instead of grounding the aircraft for every minor defect, the MEL defines which items may be deferred and under what conditions the aircraft can still be dispatched.
Key purposes include:
  • Safety assurance: Ensures that essential systems required for the planned type of operation (for example, Instrument Flight Rules (IFR), icing conditions, night operations) are fully functional.
  • Regulatory compliance: Translates high-level regulatory requirements and the Master Minimum Equipment List (MMEL) into a practical, operator-approved document.
  • Operational flexibility: Allows flights to continue with certain non-critical items inoperative, reducing unnecessary cancellations and delays.
  • Standardization: Provides a consistent decision-making process for pilots, dispatchers, and maintenance personnel when dealing with defects.
By using the MEL, operators avoid ad-hoc decisions about inoperative equipment and instead follow a documented, approved process that has been analyzed for safety and risk.

3. Use of the MEL in aviation

In day-to-day operations, the Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is used whenever a defect is discovered on an aircraft, either before flight, during post-flight checks, or recorded in the technical log. The MEL helps determine whether the aircraft is dispatchable and, if so, under which limitations and procedures.

3.1 Relationship between MMEL and MEL

The Master Minimum Equipment List (MMEL) is produced by the aircraft manufacturer and approved by the state of design or the main aviation authority. It lists, at a high level, which equipment may be inoperative for dispatch and under what broad conditions.
The operator then develops its own Minimum Equipment List (MEL) based on the MMEL. The MEL:
  • May be more restrictive than the MMEL but never less restrictive.
  • Is tailored to the operators specific aircraft configuration, equipment options, and procedures.
  • Includes references to operator checklists, maintenance procedures, and dispatch rules.
Regulators approve the MEL for each operator. Once approved, the MEL becomes the controlling document for dispatch decisions regarding inoperative equipment.

3.2 Typical MEL structure

Although the exact layout varies, most Minimum Equipment Lists (MELs) are organized by aircraft system and follow a similar structure. A typical MEL entry includes:
  • Item reference: Chapter and section, often based on the ATA (Air Transport Association) system code, for example 34-10 for navigation systems.
  • Item name: The equipment or system, such as "Attitude Indicator" or "Passenger Address System".
  • Number installed: How many of that item are on the aircraft.
  • Number required for dispatch: The minimum number that must be operative for the flight.
  • Remarks or exceptions: Conditions, limitations, or procedures to be followed when the item is inoperative, such as speed restrictions, daylight-only operation, or additional crew requirements.
Some MELs also include categories that define how long an item may remain inoperative before it must be repaired, for example Category A, B, C, or D with specific time limits.

3.3 Who uses the MEL

Several roles interact with the Minimum Equipment List (MEL):
  • Pilots: Use the MEL to decide if a flight can depart with an inoperative item and to apply any required operational limitations.
  • Maintenance personnel: Use the MEL to determine whether a defect can be deferred, what placards or maintenance actions are required, and how long the item may remain unserviceable.
  • Dispatchers or operations control: Coordinate routing and planning based on MEL restrictions, such as altitude limits, performance penalties, or alternate airport requirements.
For student pilots, direct MEL use is more common in multi-crew or commercial environments, but understanding the concept helps in interpreting aircraft logbooks and regulatory equipment requirements.

4. Operational considerations for MEL use

Using a Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is a structured process. It requires careful reading of the entry, correct interpretation of conditions, and coordination between pilots, maintenance, and, when applicable, dispatch. The goal is to ensure that any flight with inoperative equipment remains within the approved safety envelope.

4.1 Basic decision process with the MEL

When a defect is found, the typical MEL decision process is:
  1. Identify the defect: Read the aircraft technical log or note the inoperative item during preflight or postflight checks.
  2. Locate the MEL entry: Use the system index or ATA chapter to find the corresponding item in the MEL.
  3. Confirm applicability: Ensure the MEL item matches the specific equipment installed on the aircraft (model, options, and configuration).
  4. Check "number required for dispatch": Compare the number installed with the number required. If the minimum number is not met, the aircraft is not dispatchable.
  5. Review remarks and conditions: Carefully read any limitations, required procedures, placards, or maintenance actions.
  6. Apply operational limitations: Adjust the flight plan as needed (for example, day-only operation, no known icing, altitude restrictions).
  7. Document the decision: Record the defect, MEL reference, deferral category, and any placards or actions taken in the technical log, following company procedures.
If at any step the MEL indicates the item is required for the intended operation, the aircraft cannot be dispatched until the defect is corrected.

4.2 MEL categories and repair intervals

Many Minimum Equipment Lists (MELs) use categories to define how long an item may remain inoperative before repair is mandatory. While details depend on the authority, common categories include:
  • Category A: Time limit specified individually in the MEL entry.
  • Category B: Typically must be repaired within 3 consecutive calendar days (excluding the day of discovery).
  • Category C: Typically must be repaired within 10 consecutive calendar days.
  • Category D: Typically must be repaired within 120 consecutive calendar days.
These intervals control how long an operator may continue flying with an inoperative item, ensuring that deferred defects are not left uncorrected indefinitely. Student pilots should understand that deferral is temporary and monitored, not a permanent workaround.

4.3 Interaction with operating rules (VFR, IFR, day, night)

The Minimum Equipment List (MEL) does not replace basic regulatory equipment requirements. Instead, both must be satisfied. If regulations require certain equipment for a type of operation, that equipment must be operative even if the MEL might otherwise allow dispatch.
For example:
  • For day VFR, regulations may require specific instruments and radios. These must be working, regardless of MEL allowances.
  • For IFR, additional navigation and communication equipment is required. An MEL entry might allow dispatch with one of two navigation systems inoperative, but only if the remaining system meets all IFR requirements for the planned route.
  • For night operations, lighting requirements must be met. An MEL entry might restrict operations to day only if a certain light is inoperative.
Pilots must always check both the MEL and the applicable operating rules before deciding to dispatch with an inoperative item.

4.4 Placarding and crew awareness

When an item is deferred under the Minimum Equipment List (MEL), it is usually required to be placarded as inoperative. A placard is a clear label or notice placed near the control or display to remind crew members that the item must not be used.
Typical steps include:
  1. Maintenance or authorized personnel place an "INOP" placard on the affected control or indicator.
  2. The defect and MEL reference are recorded in the technical log.
  3. The crew review the MEL entry and logbook during preflight to ensure they understand the limitation.
Proper placarding prevents accidental use of inoperative systems and keeps all crew members aware of the aircraft configuration.

5. Examples of MEL use

The following brief examples illustrate how a Minimum Equipment List (MEL) might be applied in practice. Actual MEL entries and decisions depend on the specific aircraft, operator, and regulatory authority.

5.1 Example: Inoperative landing light

A pilot discovers that one of the aircraft's landing lights is inoperative during preflight. The MEL entry for "Landing Light" states that, for day VFR operations, one of two landing lights may be inoperative, provided the inoperative light is placarded and the aircraft does not operate at night.
In this case, the aircraft may be dispatched for a day VFR flight after placarding the inoperative light and recording the defect, but it cannot be used for night operations until the light is repaired.

5.2 Example: Inoperative attitude indicator in multi-pilot IFR

On a twin-engine aircraft operated under IFR with two pilots, one pilots attitude indicator is found to be inoperative. The MEL entry may allow dispatch if the other pilots attitude indicator and standby instruments are fully functional, and if additional conditions (such as no known or forecast severe turbulence) are met.
The crew would follow the MEL, ensure all conditions are satisfied, and record the defect and any associated restrictions. If the conditions are not met, the aircraft cannot depart under IFR until the indicator is repaired.

5.3 Example: Inoperative passenger address system

On a passenger aircraft, the passenger address (PA) system is inoperative. The MEL entry might allow dispatch if an alternative means of communication with passengers is available and specific procedures are followed, or it might prohibit dispatch for certain types of operations, such as extended overwater flights.
The operator would review the MEL, confirm whether the alternative communication method meets the requirement, and apply any additional limitations specified in the entry.

Summary

The Minimum Equipment List (MEL) is an operator-specific, authority-approved document that defines which aircraft equipment may be inoperative for dispatch and under what conditions. It supports safe, flexible operations by providing a structured process for handling defects, while ensuring compliance with regulations and preserving an acceptable level of safety.
For student pilots, understanding the MEL concept builds a foundation for later multi-crew or commercial flying, where MEL use is routine. Even in smaller aircraft without a formal MEL, the same principles apply: know which equipment is required, verify that it is serviceable for the intended operation, and do not depart if essential items are inoperative.