- 14 CFR Part 91 Instrument
Flight Rules
- Sec. 91.167 Fuel requirements for flight in IFR conditions.
- (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of
this section, no person may operate a civil aircraft in
IFR conditions unless it carries enough fuel (considering
weather reports and forecasts and weather conditions)
to
- (1) Complete the flight to the first
airport of intended landing;
- (2) Fly from that airport to the alternate
airport; and
- (3) Fly after that for 45 minutes at
normal cruising speed or, for helicopters, fly after that
for 30 minutes at normal cruising speed.
- (b) Paragraph (a)(2) of this section does
not apply if
- (1) Part 97 of this chapter prescribes a
standard instrument approach procedure for the first
airport of intended landing; and
- (2) For at least 1 hour before and 1 hour
after the estimated time of arrival at the airport, the
weather reports or forecasts or any combination of them
indicate
- (i) The ceiling will be at least 2,000
feet above the airport elevation; and
- (ii) Visibility will be at least 3 statute
miles.
-
- Sec. 91.169 IFR flight plan: Information required.
- (a) Information required. Unless otherwise
authorized by ATC, each person filing an IFR flight plan
shall include in it the following information:
- (1) Information required under Sec.
91.153(a).
- (2) An alternate airport, except as
provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
- (b) Exceptions to applicability of
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
- Paragraph (a)(2) of this section does not
apply if part 97 of this chapter
- prescribes a standard instrument approach
procedure for the first airport of
- intended landing and, for at least 1 hour
before and 1 hour after the
- estimated time of arrival, the weather
reports or forecasts, or any
- combination of them, indicate
- (1) The ceiling will be at least 2,000
feet above the airport elevation; and
- (2) The visibility will be at least 3
statute miles.
- (c) IFR alternate airport weather
minimums. Unless otherwise authorized by the
Administrator, no person may include an alternate airport
in an IFR flight plan unless current weather forecasts
indicate that, at the estimated time of arrival at the
alternate airport, the ceiling and visibility at that
airport will be at or above the following alternate
airport weather minimums:
- (1) If an instrument approach procedure
has been published in part 97 of this chapter for that
airport, the alternate airport minimums specified in that
procedure or, if none are so specified, the following
minimums:
- (i) Precision approach procedure: Ceiling
600 feet and visibility 2 statute miles.
- (ii) Nonprecision approach procedure:
Ceiling 800 feet and visibility 2 statute miles.
- (2) If no instrument approach procedure
has been published in part 97 of this chapter for that
airport, the ceiling and visibility minimums are those
allowing descent from the MEA, approach, and landing
under basic VFR.
- (d) Cancellation. When a flight plan has
been activated, the pilot in command, upon canceling or
completing the flight under the flight plan, shall notify
an FAA Flight Service Station or ATC facility.
-
- Sec. 91.171 VOR equipment
check for IFR operations.
- (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft
under IFR using the VOR system of radio navigation unless
the VOR equipment of that aircraft
- (1) Is maintained, checked, and inspected
under an approved procedure; or
- (2) Has been operationally checked within
the preceding 30 days, and was found to be within the
limits of the permissible indicated bearing error set
forth in paragraph (b) or © of this section.
- (b) Except as provided in paragraph © of
this section, each person conducting a VOR check under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section shall
- (1) Use, at the airport of intended
departure, an FAA-operated or approved test signal or a
test signal radiated by a certificated and appropriately
rated radio repair station or, outside the United States,
a test signal operated or approved by an appropriate
authority to check the VOR equipment (the maximum
permissible indicated bearing error is plus or minus 4
degrees); or
- (2) Use, at the airport of intended
departure, a point on the airport surface designated as a
VOR system checkpoint by the Administrator, or, outside
the United States, by an appropriate authority (the
maximum permissible bearing error is plus or minus 4
degrees);
- (3) If neither a test signal nor a
designated checkpoint on the surface is available, use an
airborne checkpoint designated by the Adninistrator or,
outside the United States, by an appropriate authority
(the maximum permissible bearing error is plus or minus 6
degrees); or
- (4) If no check signal or point is
available, while in flight
- (i) Select a VOR radial that lies along
the centerline of an established
- VOR airway;
- (ii) Select a prominent ground point along
the selected radial preferably more than 20 nautical
miles from the VOR ground facility and maneuver the
aircraft directly over the point at a reasonably low
altitude; and
- (iii) Note the VOR bearing indicated by
the receiver when over the ground point (the maximum
permissible variation between the published radial and
the indicated bearing is 6 degrees).
- (c) If dual system VOR (units independent
of each other except for the antenna) is installed in the
aircraft, the person checking the equipment may check one
system against the other in place of the check procedures
specified in paragraph (b) of this section. Both systems
shall be tuned to the same VOR ground facility and note
the indicated bearings to that station. The maximum
permissible variation between the two indicated bearings
is 4 degrees.
- (d) Each person making the VOR operational
check, as specified in paragraph
- (b) or © of this section, shall enter the
date, place, bearing error, and sign the aircraft log or
other record. In addition, if a test signal radiated by a
repair station, as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, is used, an entry must be made in the aircraft
log or other record by the repair station certificate
holder or the certificate holders representative
certifying to the bearing transmitted by the repair
station for the check and the date of transmission.
-
- Sec. 91.173 ATC clearance and flight plan required.
- No person may operate an aircraft in
controlled airspace under IFR unless
- that person has
- (a) Filed an IFR flight plan; and
- (b) Received an appropriate ATC clearance.
-
- Sec. 91.175 Takeoff
and landing under IFR.
- (a) Instrument approaches to civil
airports.
- Unless otherwise authorized by the
Administrator, when an instrument letdown to a civil
airport is necessary, each person operating an aircraft,
except a military aircraft of the United States, shall
use a standard instrument approach procedure prescribed
for the airport in part 97 of this chapter.
- (b) Authorized DH or MDA. For the purpose
of this section, when the approach procedure being used
provides for and requires the use of a DH or MDA, the
authorized DH or MDA is the highest of the following:
- (1) The DH or MDA prescribed by the
approach procedure.
- (2) The DH or MDA prescribed for the pilot
in command.
- (3) The DH or MDA for which the aircraft
is equipped.
- (c) Operation below DH or MDA. Where a DH
or MDA is applicable, no pilot may operate an aircraft,
except a military aircraft of the United States, at any
airport below the authorized MDA or continue an approach
below the authorized DH unless
- (1) The aircraft is continuously in a
position from which a descent to a landing on the
intended runway can be made at a normal rate of descent
using normal maneuvers, and for operations conducted
under part 121 or part 135 unless that descent rate will
allow touchdown to occur within the touchdown zone of the
runway of intended landing;
- (2) The flight visibility is not less than
the visibility prescribed in the standard instrument
approach being used; and
- (3) Except for a Category II or Category
III approach where any necessary visual reference
requirements are specified by the Administrator, at least
one of the following visual references for the intended
runway is distinctly visible and identifiable to the
pilot:
- (i) The approach light system, except that
the pilot may not descend below
- 100 feet above the touchdown zone
elevation using the approach lights as a reference unless
the red terminating bars or the red side row bars are
also distinctly visible and identifiable.
- (ii) The threshold.
- (iii) The threshold markings.
- (iv) The threshold lights.
- (v) The runway end identifier lights.
- (vi) The visual approach slope indicator.
- (vii) The touchdown zone or touchdown zone
markings.
- (viii) The touchdown zone lights.
- (ix) The runway or runway markings.
- (x) The runway lights.
- (d) Landing. No pilot operating an
aircraft, except a military aircraft of the United
States, may land that aircraft when the flight visibility
is less than the visibility prescribed in the standard
instrument approach procedure being used.
- (e) Missed approach procedures. Each pilot
operating an aircraft, except a military aircraft of the
United States, shall immediately execute an appropriate
missed approach procedure when either of the following
conditions exist:
- (1) Whenever the requirements of paragraph
© of this section are not met at either of the following
times:
- (i) When the aircraft is being operated
below MDA; or
- (ii) Upon arrival at the missed approach
point, including a DH where a DH is specified and its use
is required, and at any time after that until touchdown.
- (2) Whenever an identifiable part of the
airport is not distinctly visible to the pilot during a
circling maneuver at or above MDA, unless the inability
to see an identifiable part of the airport results only
from a normal bank of the aircraft during the circling
approach.
- (f) Civil airport takeoff minimums. Unless
otherwise authorized by the
- Administrator, no pilot operating an
aircraft under parts 121, 125, 127, 129, or 135 of this
chapter may take off from a civil airport under IFR
unless weather conditions are at or above the weather
minimum for IFR takeoff prescribed for that airport under
part 97 of this chapter. If takeoff minimums are not
prescribed under part 97 of this chapter for a particular
airport, the following minimums apply to takeoffs under
IFR for aircraft operating under those parts:
- (1) For aircraft, other than helicopters,
having two engines or less--1 statute mile visibility.
- (2) For aircraft having more than two
engines-- ½ statute mile visibility.
- (3) For helicopters--1/2 statute mile
visibility.
- (g) Military airports. Unless otherwise
prescribed by the Administrator, each person operating a
civil aircraft under IFR into or out of a military
airport shall comply with the instrument approach
procedures and the takeoff and landing minimum prescribed
by the military authority having jurisdiction of that
airport.
- (h) Comparable values of RVR and ground
visibility. (1) Except for Category
- II or Category III minimums, if RVR
minimums for takeoff or landing are prescribed in an
instrument approach procedure, but RVR is not reported
for the runway of intended operation, the RVR minimum
shall be converted to ground visibility in accordance
with the table in paragraph (h)(2) of this section and
shall be the visibility minimum for takeoff or landing on
that runway.
- Visibility
- (statute RVR (feet) miles)
- 1,600 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . ¼
- 2,400 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . ½
- 3,200 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 5/8
- 4,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . ¾
- 4,500 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 7/8
- 5,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 1
- 6,000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 1 ¼
- (i) Operations on unpublished routes and
use of radar in instrument approach procedures. When
radar is approved at certain locations for ATC purposes,
it may be used not only for surveillance and precision
radar approaches, as applicable, but also may be used in
conjunction with instrument approach procedures
predicated on other types of radio navigational aids.
Radar vectors may be authorized to provide course
guidance through the segments of an approach to the final
course or fix. When operating on an unpublished route or
while being radar vectored, the pilot, when an approach
clearance is received, shall, in addition to complying
with Sec. 91.177, maintain the last altitude assigned to
that pilot until the aircraft is established on a segment
of a published route or instrument approach procedure
unless a different altitude is assigned by ATC. After the
aircraft is so established, published altitudes apply to
descent within each succeeding route or approach segment
unless a different altitude is assigned by ATC. Upon
reaching the final approach course or fix, the pilot may
either complete the instrument approach in accordance
with a procedure approved for the facility or continue a
surveillance or precision radar approach to a landing.
- (j) Limitation on procedure turns. In the
case of a radar vector to a final approach course or fix,
a timed approach from a holding fix, or an approach for
which the procedure specifies "No PT," no pilot
may make a procedure turn unless cleared to do so by ATC.
- (k) ILS components. The basic ground
components of an ILS are the localizer, glide slope,
outer marker, middle marker, and, when installed for use
with Category II or Category III instrument approach
procedures, an inner marker. A compass locator or
precision radar may be substituted for the outer or
middle marker. DME, VOR, or nondirectional beacon fixes
authorized in the standard instrument approach procedure
or surveillance radar may be substituted for the outer
marker. Applicability of, and substitution for, the inner
marker for Category II or III approaches is determined by
the appropriate part 97 approach procedure, letter of
authorization, or operations specification pertinent to
the operations.
-
- Sec. 91.177 Minimum altitudes for IFR operations.
- (a) Operation of aircraft at minimum
altitudes. Except when necessary for takeoff or landing,
no person may operate an aircraft under IFR below
- (1) The applicable minimum altitudes
prescribed in Parts 95 and 97 of this chapter; or
- (2) If no applicable minimum altitude is
prescribed in those parts
- (i) In the case of operations over an area
designated as a mountainous area in part 95, an altitude
of 2,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a
horizontal distance of 4 nautical miles from the course
to be flown; or
- (ii) In any other case, an altitude of
1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal
distance of 4 nautical miles from the course to be flown.
- However, if both a MEA and a MOCA are
prescribed for a particular route or route segment, a
person may operate an aircraft below the MEA down to, but
not below, the MOCA, when within 22 nautical miles of the
VOR concerned (based on the pilots reasonable
estimate of that distance).
- (b) Climb. Climb to a higher minimum IFR
altitude shall begin immediately after passing the point
beyond which that minimum altitude applies, except that
when ground obstructions intervene, the point beyond
which that higher minimum altitude applies shall be
crossed at or above the applicable MCA.
-
- Sec. 91.179 IFR cruising altitude or flight level.
- (a) In controlled airspace. Each person
operating an aircraft under IFR in level cruising flight
in controlled airspace shall maintain the altitude or
flight level assigned that aircraft by ATC. However, if
the ATC clearance assigns "VFR conditions
on-top," that person shall maintain an altitude or
flight level as prescribed by Sec. 91.159.
- (b) In uncontrolled airspace. Except while
in a holding pattern of 2 minutes or less or while
turning, each person operating an aircraft under IFR in
level cruising flight in uncontrolled airspace shall
maintain an appropriate altitude as follows:
- (1) When operating below 18,000 feet MSL
and
- (i) On a magnetic course of zero degrees
through 179 degrees, any odd thousand foot MSL altitude
(such as 3,000, 5,000, or 7,000); or
- (ii) On a magnetic course of 180 degrees
through 359 degrees, any even thousand foot MSL altitude
(such as 2,000, 4,000, or 6,000).
- (2) When operating at or above 18,000 feet
MSL but below flight level 290, and
- (i) On a magnetic course of zero degrees
through 179 degrees, any odd flight level (such as 190,
210, or 230); or
- (ii) On a magnetic course of 180 degrees
through 359 degrees, any even flight level (such as 180,
200, or 220).
- (3) When operating at flight level 290 and
above, and
- (i) On a magnetic course of zero degrees
through 179 degrees, any flight level, at 4,000-foot
intervals, beginning at and including flight level 290
(such as flight level 290, 330, or 370); or
- (ii) On a magnetic course of 180 degrees
through 359 degrees, any flight level, at 4,000-foot
intervals, beginning at and including flight level 310
(such as flight level 310, 350, or 390).
-
- Sec. 91.181 Course to be
flown.
- Unless otherwise authorized by ATC, no
person may operate an aircraft within controlled airspace
under IFR except as follows:
- (a) On a Federal airway, along the
centerline of that airway.
- (b) On any other route, along the direct
course between the navigational aids or fixes defining
that route. However, this section does not prohibit
maneuvering the aircraft to pass well clear of other air
traffic or the maneuvering of the aircraft in VFR
conditions to clear the intended flight path both before
and during climb or descent.
-
- Sec. 91.183 IFR radio
communications.
- The pilot in command of each aircraft
operated under IFR in controlled
- airspace shall have a continuous watch
maintained on the appropriate
- frequency and shall report by radio as
soon as possible
- (a) The time and altitude of passing each
designated reporting point, or the reporting points
specified by ATC, except that while the aircraft is under
radar control, only the passing of those reporting points
specifically requested by ATC need be reported;
- (b) Any unforecast weather conditions
encountered; and
- (c) Any other information relating to the
safety of flight.
-
- Sec. 91.185 IFR operations: Two-way radio communications failure.
- (a) General. Unless otherwise authorized
by ATC, each pilot who has two-way radio communications
failure when operating under IFR shall comply with the
rules of this section.
- (b) VFR conditions. If the failure occurs
in VFR conditions, or if VFR conditions are encountered
after the failure, each pilot shall continue the flight
under VFR and land as soon as practicable.
- (c) IFR conditions. If the failure occurs
in IFR conditions, or if paragraph (b) of this section
cannot be complied with, each pilot shall continue the
flight according to the following:
- (1) Route. (i) By the route assigned in
the last ATC clearance received;
- (ii) If being radar vectored, by the
direct route from the point of radio failure to the fix,
route, or airway specified in the vector clearance;
- (iii) In the absence of an assigned route,
by the route that ATC has advised may be expected in a
further clearance; or
- (iv) In the absence of an assigned route
or a route that ATC has advised may be expected in a
further clearance, by the route filed in the flight plan.
- (2) Altitude. At the highest of the
following altitudes or flight levels for the route
segment being flown:
- (i) The altitude or flight level assigned
in the last ATC clearance received;
- (ii) The minimum altitude (converted, if
appropriate, to minimum flight level as prescribed in
Sec. 91.121©) for IFR operations; or
- (iii) The altitude or flight level ATC has
advised may be expected in a further clearance.
- (3) Leave clearance limit. (i) When the
clearance limit is a fix from which an approach begins,
commence descent or descent and approach as close as
possible to the expect-further-clearance time if one has
been received, or if one has not been received, as close
as possible to the estimated time of arrival as
calculated from the filed or amended (with ATC) estimated
time en route.
- (ii) If the clearance limit is not a fix
from which an approach begins, leave the clearance limit
at the expect-further-clearance time if one has been
received, or if none has been received, upon arrival over
the clearance limit, and proceed to a fix from which an
approach begins and commence descent or descent and
approach as close as possible to the estimated time of
arrival as calculated from the filed or amended (with
ATC) estimated time en route.
-
- Sec. 91.187 Operation under IFR in
controlled airspace: Malfunction
reports.
- (a) The pilot in command of each aircraft
operated in controlled airspace under IFR shall report as
soon as practical to ATC any malfunctions of
navigational, approach, or communication equipment
occurring in flight.
- (b) In each report required by paragraph
(a) of this section, the pilot in command shall include
the
- (1) Aircraft identification;
- (2) Equipment affected;
- (3) Degree to which the capability of the
pilot to operate under IFR in the
- ATC system is impaired; and
- (4) Nature and extent of assistance
desired from ATC.
-
- Sec. 91.189 Category
II and III operations: General
operating rules.
- (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft
in a Category II or III operation unless
- (1) The flight crew of the aircraft
consists of a pilot in command and a second in command
who hold the appropriate authorizations and ratings
prescribed in Sec. 61.3 of this chapter;
- (2) Each flight crewmember has adequate
knowledge of, and familiarity with, the aircraft and the
procedures to be used; and
- (3) The instrument panel in front of the
pilot who is controlling the aircraft has appropriate
instrumentation for the type of flight control guidance
system that is being used.
- (b) Unless otherwise authorized by the
Administrator, no person may operate a civil aircraft in
a Category II or Category III operation unless each
ground component required for that operation and the
related airborne equipment is installed and operating.
- (c) Authorized DH. For the purpose of this
section, when the approach procedure being used provides
for and requires the use of a DH, the authorized DH is
the highest of the following:
- (1) The DH prescribed by the approach
procedure.
- (2) The DH prescribed for the pilot in
command.
- (3) The DH for which the aircraft is
equipped.
- (d) Unless otherwise authorized by the
Administrator, no pilot operating an aircraft in a
Category II or Category III approach that provides and
requires use of a DH may continue the approach below the
authorized decision height unless the following
conditions are met:
- (1) The aircraft is in a position from
which a descent to a landing on the intended runway can
be made at a normal rate of descent using normal
maneuvers, and where that descent rate will allow
touchdown to occur within the touchdown zone of the
runway of intended landing.
- (2) At least one of the following visual
references for the intended runway is distinctly visible
and identifiable to the pilot:
- (i) The approach light system, except that
the pilot may not descend below
- 100 feet above the touchdown zone
elevation using the approach lights as a reference unless
the red terminating bars or the red side row bars are
also distinctly visible and identifiable.
- (ii) The threshold.
- (iii) The threshold markings.
- (iv) The threshold lights.
- (v) The touchdown zone or touchdown zone
markings.
- (vi) The touchdown zone lights.
- (e) Unless otherwise authorized by the
Administrator, each pilot operating an aircraft shall
immediately execute an appropriate missed approach
whenever, prior to touchdown, the requirements of
paragraph (d) of this section are not met.
- (f) No person operating an aircraft using
a Category III approach without decision height may land
that aircraft except in accordance with the provisions of
the letter of authorization issued by the Administrator.
- (g) Paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section do not apply to operations conducted by the
holders of certificates issued under part 121, 125, 129,
or 135 of this chapter. No person may operate a civil
aircraft in a Category II or Category III operation
conducted by the holder of a certificate issued under
part 121, 125, 129, or 135 of this chapter unless the
operation is conducted in accordance with that
certificate holders operations specifications.
-
- Sec. 91.191 Category II
manual.
- (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft
of United States registry in a
- Category II operation unless
- (1) There is available in the aircraft a
current, approved Category II manual for that aircraft;
- (2) The operation is conducted in
accordance with the procedures, instructions, and
limitations in that manual; and
- (3) The instruments and equipment listed
in the manual that are required for a particular Category
II operation have been inspected and maintained in
accordance with the maintenance program contained in that
manual.
- (b) Each operator shall keep a current
copy of the approved manual at its principal base of
operations and shall make it available for inspection
upon request of the Administrator.
- (c) This section does not apply to
operations conducted by the holder of a certificate
issued under part 121 of this chapter.
-
- Sec. 91.193 Certificate of authorization for certain
Category II operations.
- The Administrator may issue a certificate
of authorization authorizing deviations from the
requirements of Secs. 91.189, 91.191, and 91.205(f) for
the operation of small aircraft identified as Category A
aircraft in Sec. 97.3 of this chapter in Category II
operations if the Administrator finds that the proposed
operation can be safely conducted under the terms of the
certificate. Such authorization does not permit operation
of the aircraft carrying persons or property for
compensation or hire.
Index To CFR's | Instrument Rating | 91 Index