Aviation Weather Services: The Complete Pilot's Reference
By Renzo, CPL · Updated March 2026
Every flight begins and ends with weather. Knowing how to find, decode, and interpret the full suite of aviation weather products is what separates a prepared pilot from one who gets surprised. This guide covers every weather service available to pilots — from raw METAR and TAF reports to PIREPs, SIGMETs, AIRMETs, prog charts, radar, satellite, winds aloft, briefing types, 1800wxbrief, ForeFlight, and ADS-B weather in the cockpit.
Last updated: March 2026 · Sources: FAA Aviation Weather Services (AC 00-45H), AIM Chapter 7, NWS, AWC
~900
ASOS/AWOS Stations in US
24-30hr
TAF Forecast Period
122.0
Flight Watch (EFAS) MHz
978 MHz
FIS-B ADS-B Frequency
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1. Aviation Weather Products Overview
Aviation weather products fall into two categories: observations (what the weather is right now) and forecasts (what the weather is expected to be). Understanding which products are observations versus forecasts is critical — they have different levels of reliability and different uses in your decision-making.
Observations (Current)
- METAR/SPECI — Surface observations at airports
- PIREPs (UA/UUA) — Pilot reports from aircraft in flight
- RADAR — Precipitation location and intensity
- Satellite Imagery — Cloud cover and movement
- ATIS/AWOS/ASOS — Automated surface observations
- Radiosonde (RAOB) — Upper air temperature, humidity, wind
Forecasts (Predicted)
- TAF — Terminal aerodrome forecast (24-30 hours)
- Area Forecast / GFA — Regional forecast (graphical)
- Winds Aloft (FB) — Wind and temperature at altitude
- Prog Charts — Surface and significant weather forecasts
- SIGMETs/AIRMETs — Hazardous weather advisories
- Convective Outlook — Thunderstorm probability
2. METAR Decoding — Full Format with Examples
A METAR (Meteorological Aerodrome Report) is the standard format for surface weather observations at airports worldwide. METARs are issued hourly, with SPECI (special) reports issued whenever conditions change significantly. Every pilot must be able to decode a METAR quickly and accurately.
Example METAR:
SPECI KORD 121956Z 18025G38KT 1/2SM +TSRA FG BKN008 OVC025CB 24/23 A2968 RMK AO2 PK WND 19042/1952 TWR VIS 1 PRESRR SLP045 FRQ LTGICCCCG TS OHD MOV E T02440233
Element-by-Element Breakdown
Cloud Cover Abbreviations
| Abbreviation | Meaning | Oktas | Ceiling? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SKC / CLR | Sky clear | 0 | No |
| FEW | Few clouds | 1-2 | No |
| SCT | Scattered | 3-4 | No |
| BKN | Broken | 5-7 | Yes |
| OVC | Overcast | 8 | Yes |
| VV | Vertical visibility (obscured sky) | 8 | Yes |
Practice decoding with our density altitude calculator — temperature and altimeter from METARs feed directly into density altitude calculations.
3. Weather Phenomena Codes
Weather phenomena in METARs and TAFs use standardized abbreviations with intensity prefixes: + (heavy), no prefix (moderate), - (light), and VC (in the vicinity, 5-10 sm from the station). Descriptors include TS (thunderstorm), SH (shower), FZ (freezing), BL (blowing), DR (drifting), MI (shallow), PR (partial), and BC (patches).
| Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
| RA | Rain |
| SN | Snow |
| FG | Fog (visibility < 5/8 sm) |
| BR | Mist (visibility 5/8 to 6 sm) |
| HZ | Haze |
| TS | Thunderstorm |
| FZRA | Freezing rain |
| FZDZ | Freezing drizzle |
| SQ | Squall |
| FC | Funnel cloud/tornado |
| GR | Hail (> 1/4 inch) |
| GS | Small hail / snow pellets |
| PL | Ice pellets (sleet) |
| DZ | Drizzle |
| FU | Smoke |
| VA | Volcanic ash |
| SA | Sand |
| DU | Widespread dust |
| SS | Sandstorm |
| DS | Dust storm |
| VCSH | Showers in the vicinity |
| VCTS | Thunderstorm in the vicinity |
4. TAF Decoding & Change Groups
Terminal Aerodrome Forecasts (TAFs) predict weather conditions at airports for the next 24 to 30 hours. TAFs are issued four times daily (00Z, 06Z, 12Z, 18Z) and use the same weather codes as METARs plus change indicators that describe how conditions will evolve. TAFs are the single most important forecast product for flight planning.
Example TAF:
TAF KJFK 121730Z 1218/1324 31012KT P6SM FEW040 BKN250
FM122200 28015G25KT 4SM -RA BKN020
TEMPO 1222/1302 2SM +RA OVC010
FM130600 33008KT P6SM SCT030 BKN100
BECMG 1312/1314 SKC
PROB30 TEMPO 1316/1320 3SM TSRA BKN030CB
Decoding the Header
Change Indicators
FM (From)
Complete change to new conditions at specified time. All previous conditions replaced. Example: FM122200 = from 12th at 2200Z
Example: FM122200 28015G25KT 4SM -RA BKN020
TEMPO (Temporary)
Fluctuations expected for less than half the time period. Conditions alternate between prevailing and TEMPO forecast
Example: TEMPO 1222/1302 2SM RA OVC015
BECMG (Becoming)
Gradual, permanent transition during the specified window. Once complete, new conditions persist
Example: BECMG 1312/1314 33010KT P6SM SKC
PROB30/PROB40
30% or 40% probability of specified conditions. Only used with TEMPO. PROB values below 30% or above 50% are not used
Example: PROB40 TEMPO 0200/0600 1SM FG
NSW
No significant weather. Used in BECMG or TEMPO groups to indicate weather phenomena ending
Example: BECMG 1806/1808 NSW
AMD / COR
AMD = amended forecast replacing previous. COR = corrected forecast fixing errors in previously issued TAF
Example: TAF AMD KJFK 121800Z...
5. PIREPs — Pilot Reports (UA vs UUA)
Pilot Reports (PIREPs) are weather observations made by pilots in flight. They are the only source of direct observation of conditions between surface weather stations and at altitude. PIREPs report turbulence, icing, cloud tops/bases, visibility, and wind at the pilot's actual location. They are invaluable because no instrument or model can replace what a pilot actually experiences.
UA — Routine PIREP
Reports routine or moderate conditions: light-to-moderate turbulence, light-to-moderate icing, cloud layers, visibility, and winds at altitude. Filed voluntarily but always encouraged.
UUA — Urgent PIREP
Reports severe or extreme conditions: severe or extreme turbulence, severe icing, tornadoes or funnel clouds, hail, volcanic ash, low-level wind shear (LLWS). ATC is required to solicit UUAs.
Example PIREP:
UA /OV KJFK090020 /TM 1830 /FL085 /TP B738 /SK BKN045-TOP065 /WX FV03SM HZ /TA M02 /WV 27045KT /TB MOD 050-080 /IC LGT RIME 060-085 /RM LLWS -15KT SFC-030
PIREP Field Codes
| Field | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| /OV | Location (over) | OV JFK090020 = on 090 radial, 20 NM from JFK |
| /TM | Time (UTC) | TM 1830 = 1830Z |
| /FL | Flight level or altitude | FL085 = 8,500 ft MSL; DURGD = during descent |
| /TP | Aircraft type | TP BE36 = Beechcraft Bonanza |
| /SK | Sky conditions | SK BKN045-TOP065 = broken layer 4,500-6,500 ft |
| /WX | Weather / flight visibility | WX FV03SM HZ = 3 miles in haze |
| /TA | Temperature (Celsius) | TA M05 = -5 degrees Celsius |
| /WV | Wind velocity | WV 270045KT = 270 degrees at 45 knots |
| /TB | Turbulence | TB MOD 050-080 = moderate between 5,000-8,000 ft |
| /IC | Icing | IC LGT-MOD RIME 060-085 = light-mod rime 6,000-8,500 |
| /RM | Remarks (free text) | RM LLWS -15KT SFC-030 = low-level wind shear |
Turbulence & Icing Intensity Scale
Turbulence (TB)
- LGT (Light) — Slight erratic changes in altitude/attitude
- MOD (Moderate) — Changes in altitude/attitude but aircraft remains in positive control
- SEV (Severe) — Large abrupt changes; aircraft may momentarily be out of control
- EXTRM (Extreme) — Aircraft practically impossible to control; structural damage possible
Icing (IC)
- Trace — Barely perceptible; deicing/anti-icing not required
- LGT (Light) — Rate allows safe flight; occasional deicing may be needed
- MOD (Moderate) — Rate may create a hazard; deicing/diversion necessary
- SEV (Severe) — Rate exceeds deice capability; immediate exit required
6. SIGMETs vs AIRMETs
SIGMETs (Significant Meteorological Information) and AIRMETs (Airmen's Meteorological Information) are in-flight weather advisories issued by the Aviation Weather Center (AWC). Understanding the difference between them is essential for every pilot and is a common exam topic.
| Feature | SIGMET | AIRMET |
|---|---|---|
| Severity | Severe or extreme conditions | Moderate conditions (hazardous to light aircraft) |
| Turbulence | Severe turbulence | Moderate turbulence (AIRMET Tango) |
| Icing | Severe icing | Moderate icing (AIRMET Zulu) |
| Visibility | N/A | IFR: ceilings < 1,000 ft, vis < 3 sm (AIRMET Sierra) |
| Mountain obscuration | N/A | Mountains obscured (AIRMET Sierra) |
| Sustained surface winds | N/A | Sustained winds > 30 kt (AIRMET Tango) |
| Volcanic ash | Yes (separate SIGMET series) | N/A |
| Dust/sandstorm | Visibility < 3 nm | N/A |
| Duration | Up to 4 hours | Up to 6 hours |
| Applies to | All aircraft | Primarily GA and light aircraft |
AIRMET Types (The Three Letters)
Sierra (S)
IFR conditions: ceilings below 1,000 ft, visibility below 3 sm, and/or mountain obscuration. Affects VFR pilots most.
Tango (T)
Turbulence: moderate turbulence, sustained surface winds 30+ knots, and/or low-level wind shear (non-convective).
Zulu (Z)
Icing: moderate icing and freezing level information. Critical for aircraft without known-ice certification.
7. Convective SIGMETs
Convective SIGMETs are the highest-level thunderstorm advisory. They are issued for the contiguous United States and cover the most dangerous convective hazards. A Convective SIGMET implies severe or greater turbulence, severe icing, and low-level wind shear — all hazards that can be catastrophic.
Convective SIGMET Criteria
- Tornadoes — reported or indicated by radar
- Lines of thunderstorms — at least 60 nm long with cells within 30 nm of the line
- Embedded thunderstorms — thunderstorms hidden within cloud layers or precipitation
- Area of heavy precipitation — ≥ 40% coverage over 3,000+ square miles
- Surface hail — ≥ 3/4 inch diameter
- Surface wind gusts — ≥ 50 knots from thunderstorms
Example Convective SIGMET:
CONVECTIVE SIGMET 22C
VALID UNTIL 2055Z
KS OK TX
FROM 30NW ICT-30S MKC-50SW SGF-40SW TUL-30NW ICT
AREA EMBD TS MOV FROM 24035KT. TOPS ABV FL450.
WIND GUSTS TO 60KTS RPRTD. TORNADOES...HAIL TO 2 IN...WIND GUSTS TO 65KTS POSS.
2 hrs
Valid duration
Hourly
Issue frequency (H+55)
3 regions
East (E), Central (C), West (W)
8. Area Forecasts & Graphical Forecasts for Aviation (GFA)
The traditional text-based Area Forecast (FA) has been replaced by the Graphical Forecasts for Aviation (GFA) tool on the Aviation Weather Center website (aviationweather.gov). The GFA provides a visual, interactive display of forecast weather conditions across the US.
GFA Layers Available
Surface
Fronts, pressure systems, surface winds, precipitation type and intensity
Clouds
Cloud coverage, bases, tops, and layers at multiple altitudes. Essential for VFR planning
Precipitation / Weather
Type (rain, snow, freezing rain), intensity, and areal coverage
Ceiling & Visibility
Flight categories (VFR/MVFR/IFR/LIFR) color-coded across the map
Turbulence
Forecast turbulence intensity at multiple flight levels (surface through FL450)
Icing
Forecast icing severity, type, and freezing level at multiple altitudes
The GFA allows you to step through time (every 3 hours, out to 18 hours) and toggle between observed conditions and forecast conditions. This is one of the most powerful free tools available to pilots — use it for every cross-country.
9. Prognostic Charts (Prog Charts)
Prognostic charts are forecast maps that depict expected weather conditions at specific future times. They provide the big-picture view that individual METARs and TAFs cannot. Two types are most relevant to pilots:
Surface Prog Chart
Shows forecast positions of fronts (cold, warm, stationary, occluded), pressure systems (high/low centers with central pressure), precipitation areas, and surface pressure isobars. Issued for 12, 24, 36, and 48 hours in advance. Critical for understanding how weather systems are moving and when fronts will affect your route.
- Cold front: blue triangles pointing direction of movement
- Warm front: red semicircles pointing direction of movement
- Stationary front: alternating blue/red symbols
- Occluded front: purple alternating triangles/semicircles
Significant Weather Prog Chart
The Low-Level Significant Weather (SIGWX) chart covers surface to FL240 (24,000 ft) and shows forecast areas of IFR and MVFR conditions, turbulence, freezing levels, and significant weather. The High-Level SIGWX chart covers FL250-FL630 and is primarily for jet/airline operations, showing jet streams, tropopause height, CAT areas, and volcanic ash.
- Scalloped lines: areas of IFR or MVFR (check legend)
- Dashed lines: freezing level contours
- Moderate turbulence: dashed hatching
10. Winds & Temperatures Aloft (FB)
The Winds and Temperatures Aloft Forecast (FB) provides forecast wind direction, wind speed, and temperature at specific altitudes above selected stations. FB data is critical for flight planning — choosing your cruising altitude, calculating fuel burn, estimating ground speed, and determining wind correction angles. Use our wind correction calculator to apply winds aloft to your flight planning.
Example Winds Aloft (FD):
| STN | 3000 | 6000 | 9000 | 12000 | 18000 | 24000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FT | --- | 2714 | 2725+07 | 2741+02 | 2756-07 | 2770-15 |
How to Decode FB Reports
FB forecasts are issued twice daily for periods of 6, 12, and 24 hours in advance. Use them with our true airspeed calculator and fuel burn calculator for accurate flight planning.
11. Flight Categories — VFR, MVFR, IFR, LIFR
Flight categories classify weather conditions based on ceiling and visibility. These categories are color-coded on weather maps and are the first thing to check when evaluating whether a flight is feasible.
| Category | Ceiling | Visibility | Color | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VFR | > 3,000 ft AGL | > 5 sm | Green | Go — standard VFR operations |
| MVFR | 1,000 – 3,000 ft AGL | 3 – 5 sm | Blue | Caution — marginal, monitor closely |
| IFR | 500 – 999 ft AGL | 1 – 2 sm | Red | IFR flight plan required. Not suitable for VFR pilots |
| LIFR | < 500 ft AGL | < 1 sm | Magenta | Low IFR — instrument approach required, circling may not be possible |
12. Radar Interpretation for Pilots
Weather radar (NEXRAD in the US) detects precipitation intensity and movement. Understanding how to read radar imagery is critical for avoiding thunderstorms, heavy precipitation, and associated turbulence. Radar shows where precipitation IS, not where clouds are — clear air turbulence (CAT) will not appear on radar.
Radar Reflectivity Scale (dBZ)
Radar Products for Pilots
Composite Reflectivity
Maximum reflectivity at any altitude in the column. The most common view — shows worst-case precipitation intensity.
Base Reflectivity
Reflectivity at the lowest radar scan angle (~0.5 degrees). Shows precipitation closest to the surface.
Echo Tops
Highest altitude where radar detects precipitation. Higher tops = stronger storms. Tops above FL350 indicate severe convection.
Vertically Integrated Liquid (VIL)
Total water content in a vertical column. Higher VIL = more intense storm. VIL > 50 kg/m2 suggests severe weather.
13. Satellite Imagery Types
Satellite imagery provides the broadest view of weather patterns and is especially valuable for identifying cloud systems, moisture patterns, and developing convection. Three types of satellite imagery are used in aviation:
Visible (VIS)
Shows sunlight reflected by clouds and the earth's surface. Only available during daylight hours. Thicker clouds appear brighter. Best for identifying cloud type, coverage, and texture. Fog and low stratus are easily visible.
Limitation: not available at night
Infrared (IR)
Measures thermal radiation emitted by clouds and the surface. Available 24 hours. Colder objects (higher cloud tops) appear brighter/white. Essential for identifying thunderstorm intensity — the brightest, coldest tops indicate the strongest updrafts.
24-hour availability, shows cloud-top temperature
Water Vapor (WV)
Shows moisture content in the middle and upper troposphere (roughly 10,000-30,000 ft). Reveals moisture patterns even where no clouds exist. Shows jet stream position, areas of rising/sinking air, and potential convection zones.
24-hour, reveals invisible moisture patterns
Satellite loops (animated sequences) are far more useful than single images. They reveal cloud movement, development, and dissipation trends. Check satellite loops on aviationweather.gov or in your EFB app as part of every pre-flight briefing.
14. Weather Briefing Types
FAR 91.103 requires pilots to become familiar with all available information concerning a flight. A weather briefing from Flight Service satisfies this requirement and provides information tailored to your specific route and time. There are three types of briefings:
Standard Briefing
When: Initial briefing for any flight. Requested when you have not previously received any weather information
Includes: Adverse conditions, VFR flight not recommended (if applicable), synopsis, current conditions, en route forecast, destination forecast, winds aloft, NOTAMs, ATC delays
Tip: Always start here for flights more than 2 hours away. Say: 'I'd like a standard briefing from [departure] to [destination], departing at [time]'
Abbreviated Briefing
When: Update a previous standard briefing or supplement information from other sources (ForeFlight, etc.)
Includes: Only the specific information you request, plus any adverse conditions or significant changes since your last briefing
Tip: Tell the briefer what information you already have. Say: 'Abbreviated briefing, I have current METARs and TAFs, need PIREPs and NOTAMs for...'
Outlook Briefing
When: Flight planned 6+ hours in the future. Used for initial planning before a go/no-go decision
Includes: General weather trends, forecast conditions for your proposed departure time, potential hazards
Tip: Follow up with a standard briefing closer to departure. Say: 'Outlook briefing for a flight tomorrow morning from [departure] to [destination]'
Standard Briefing Format (In Order)
- 1Adverse Conditions — Any weather or conditions that may affect flight safety: SIGMETs, AIRMETs, CWAs, PIREPs of severe conditions
- 2VFR Flight Not Recommended — If conditions make VFR flight questionable (advisory only, not regulatory)
- 3Synopsis — Big picture: fronts, pressure systems, and how they will affect your route over the next 12-18 hours
- 4Current Conditions — Latest METARs, SPECIs, radar, satellite, and PIREPs along your route
- 5En Route Forecast — Forecast conditions along your route including clouds, visibility, weather, winds
- 6Destination Forecast — TAF and expected conditions at your destination for your ETA window
- 7Winds Aloft — FB data for selected altitudes along your route
- 8NOTAMs — Notices including TFRs, runway closures, navaid outages, and FDC NOTAMs
- 9ATC Delays — Any known flow control programs, ground stops, or expected delays
15. 1800wxbrief & Leidos Flight Service
1-800-WX-BRIEF (1-800-992-7433) connects you to Leidos Flight Service, the contractor that operates the FAA's Flight Service Stations (FSS). Leidos replaced Lockheed Martin in 2018. The telephone number has not changed, and the same services are available online at 1800wxbrief.com.
By Phone
- Weather briefings — standard, abbreviated, outlook
- File flight plans — VFR, IFR, DVFR
- Open/close VFR flight plans
- Activate/cancel IFR flight plans (in non-radar areas)
- File PIREPs
- NOTAM information
- En Route Flight Advisory Service (EFAS / Flight Watch on 122.0 MHz)
Have ready: pilot certificate number, aircraft N-number, departure/destination, proposed route, altitude, departure time, aircraft type.
Online (1800wxbrief.com)
- Graphical briefings — visual weather along your route
- Electronic flight plan filing
- NOTAM search and management
- TFR map — graphical display of all active TFRs
- Decoded weather products
- Briefing records — downloadable for your records
- ICAO flight plan filing
Create a free account. Briefings obtained online count as "having received a briefing" for FAR 91.103 compliance.
16. ForeFlight & EFB Weather Tools
Electronic Flight Bag (EFB) apps like ForeFlight, Garmin Pilot, and FlyQ have transformed how pilots access weather. ForeFlight is the most popular in the US and connects to Leidos Flight Service for official briefings.
ForeFlight Weather Features
Graphical Briefing
Route-specific weather summary with METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, AIRMETs, PIREPs, NOTAMs, and winds aloft displayed graphically along your route.
Radar Overlay
NEXRAD radar, satellite imagery, lightning, and turbulence overlaid on the map. Color-coded by intensity with time slider for history and forecast.
Profile View
Vertical cross-section of weather along your route showing cloud layers, icing, turbulence at altitude. Invaluable for altitude selection.
Aeronautical Decision Support
Color-coded flight categories on airports (green/blue/red/magenta), wind barbs, ceiling/visibility text on the map.
Imagery
Surface analysis, prog charts, satellite, radar, SPC convective outlook — all accessible in-app without switching to external websites.
File & Brief
File VFR/IFR flight plans and receive official Leidos briefings directly in the app. Briefing is stored for regulatory compliance.
Other Popular EFB Apps
- Garmin Pilot — Integrates with Garmin avionics and ADS-B receivers. Full weather briefing capability via Leidos. Strong situational awareness tools.
- FlyQ EFB — Popular for its simplicity and one-time purchase model. Includes weather overlays, flight planning, and approach plates.
- Fltplan.com / FltPlan Go — Free flight planning with weather briefings. Popular with professional pilots. Now part of Garmin ecosystem.
- aviationweather.gov — Free. The Aviation Weather Center's official site. GFA tool, TAFs, METARs, prog charts, SIGMETs — every product available.
17. ADS-B Weather (FIS-B) in the Cockpit
ADS-B In receivers on 978 MHz (UAT) can pick up FIS-B (Flight Information Service — Broadcast) data transmitted by ground stations. This gives you free, subscription-free weather in the cockpit — a game-changer for GA pilots.
FIS-B Weather Products
| Product | Update Rate | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| NEXRAD (Regional) | ~2.5 min | Within ~250 NM |
| NEXRAD (National) | ~15 min | CONUS-wide |
| METARs / SPECIs | ~5 min | All reporting stations |
| TAFs | ~5 min | All TAF stations |
| PIREPs | ~10 min | All current PIREPs |
| SIGMETs / AIRMETs | ~5 min | CONUS |
| Convective SIGMETs | ~5 min | CONUS |
| Winds & Temps Aloft | ~10 min | All FB stations |
| NOTAMs (D and FDC) | ~10 min | Within ~100 NM |
| ATIS | ~5 min | Within ~100 NM |
FIS-B Limitations
18. NOTAMs & TFRs
Notices to Air Missions (NOTAMs) communicate temporary changes, hazards, or conditions that affect flight. Missing a critical NOTAM — especially a TFR — can have severe consequences including certificate action and interception by military aircraft.
NOTAM Categories
D-NOTAMs
Airport and facility-specific: runway closures, taxiway restrictions, lighting outages, navaid shutdowns, obstacle construction, crane activity, wildlife hazards.
FDC NOTAMs
Regulatory and procedural: TFRs, instrument approach procedure amendments, chart corrections, airspace changes. FDC NOTAMs can modify published procedures — always check before flying an approach.
TFRs (Temporary Flight Restrictions)
Restricted airspace for: presidential/VIP movements, sporting events, disaster/hazard areas (wildfires, chemical spills), space launches, national security. TFR violations can result in certificate suspension, fines, and/or military intercept.
Military NOTAMs
Military airspace activation, special use airspace (MOAs, restricted areas, warning areas), military exercises, drone operations in military airspace.
Center Area NOTAMs
ARTCC-specific information: navigation, communication, and airspace changes within a specific Center's area of responsibility.
19. Weather Decision-Making Framework
Having access to weather products is only valuable if you know how to use them in a structured decision-making process. The following framework ensures you check the right products at the right time, whether flying VFR or IFR.
1. Big Picture (24-48 hrs out)
Check prog charts, convective outlooks, and area forecasts for general trends
Sources: AWC prog charts, GFA, SPC convective outlook
2. Route Planning (6-12 hrs)
Get an outlook briefing. Review TAFs, SIGMETs/AIRMETs, winds aloft for route selection
Sources: 1800wxbrief, ForeFlight, TAFs, winds aloft
3. Go/No-Go (2-4 hrs)
Standard briefing. Check METARs, PIREPs, radar/satellite, NOTAMs. Apply personal minimums
Sources: Standard briefing, METARs, PIREPs, radar
4. Pre-Departure (30-60 min)
Final METAR/TAF check, abbreviated briefing for changes, ATIS at departure airport
Sources: ATIS, abbreviated briefing, latest METARs
5. In-Flight
Monitor HIWAS, EFAS (Flight Watch 122.0), ADS-B weather, ATC PIREPs. Continuous evaluation
Sources: FIS-B, Flight Watch, ATC, onboard weather
6. Destination (30 min out)
Get destination ATIS/AWOS. Verify conditions meet approach minimums. Have alternates ready
Sources: ATIS/AWOS, METAR, alternate planning
VFR vs IFR: Different Weather Concerns
VFR Pilot Priorities
- Ceilings and visibility along entire route
- Terrain clearance vs cloud bases
- Trends: improving or deteriorating?
- Fog/low stratus risk (temp/dewpoint spread)
- Convective activity and movement
- Mountain obscuration (AIRMET Sierra)
- Wind and turbulence at planned altitude
- Escape routes and divert options
IFR Pilot Priorities
- Destination weather vs approach minimums
- Alternate weather requirements (1-2-3 rule)
- Icing levels vs MEA/planned altitude
- Turbulence (AIRMET Tango, PIREPs)
- Convective activity (avoid, not penetrate)
- Winds aloft for fuel planning
- NOTAMs: navaid outages, approach availability
- Missed approach procedure weather viability
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 1800wxbrief and how do I use it?
1800wxbrief (1-800-WX-BRIEF) is the FAA's official Flight Service telephone number, now operated by Leidos Flight Service. You can call to request standard, abbreviated, or outlook weather briefings, file flight plans, open/close VFR flight plans, and get NOTAMs. The same services are available online at 1800wxbrief.com, where you can access graphical weather, file flight plans electronically, and review briefing documents. You must provide your pilot certificate number and aircraft N-number when calling.
What is the difference between a SIGMET and an AIRMET?
SIGMETs warn of severe weather hazardous to ALL aircraft: severe turbulence, severe icing, volcanic ash, dust/sandstorms reducing visibility below 3 nm, and thunderstorms (Convective SIGMETs). They last up to 4 hours. AIRMETs warn of moderate-level hazards primarily affecting light aircraft and less experienced pilots: moderate turbulence (Tango), moderate icing and freezing levels (Zulu), and IFR conditions/mountain obscuration (Sierra). AIRMETs last up to 6 hours.
How do I decode a METAR report?
Read a METAR left to right: report type (METAR/SPECI), station ID (KJFK), date/time in UTC (121856Z), wind direction/speed/gusts (31015G25KT), visibility in statute miles (10SM), runway visual range if applicable, weather phenomena (+TSRA = heavy thunderstorm with rain), cloud layers (BKN025 = broken at 2,500 ft AGL), temperature/dewpoint in Celsius (18/12), altimeter setting (A2992 = 29.92 inHg), and remarks. The lowest BKN or OVC layer is the ceiling.
What is a Convective SIGMET and when is it issued?
Convective SIGMETs are issued for the most dangerous thunderstorm-related hazards in the contiguous US: tornadoes, lines of thunderstorms (squall lines), embedded thunderstorms, thunderstorm areas with heavy precipitation covering 40%+ of an area at least 3,000 square miles, hail at the surface 3/4 inch or greater, and wind gusts to 50 knots or more. They are issued hourly and valid for 2 hours. Convective SIGMETs imply severe or greater turbulence, severe icing, and low-level wind shear.
What is a PIREP and why is it important?
A Pilot Report (PIREP) is a weather observation made by a pilot in flight. PIREPs are the ONLY direct observation of conditions between weather stations and at altitude. They report turbulence intensity, icing type and severity, cloud tops and bases, visibility, and wind. Routine PIREPs (UA) report normal or moderate conditions. Urgent PIREPs (UUA) report severe or extreme turbulence, severe icing, tornadoes, funnel clouds, hail, volcanic ash, or low-level wind shear. Filing PIREPs is both helpful and encouraged — it directly helps other pilots make better decisions.
How do I read a TAF forecast?
A TAF starts with the station ID, issue time, and valid period (e.g., 1218/1324 = valid from 12th at 18Z to 13th at 24Z). The initial line shows baseline forecast conditions. Change groups modify the forecast: FM (from) = complete change at that time, TEMPO = temporary fluctuation for less than half the period, BECMG = gradual permanent change over the specified window, PROB30/40 = probability percentage used only with TEMPO. TAFs cover 24-30 hours and are issued 4 times daily.
What weather information does ADS-B provide in the cockpit?
ADS-B In receivers pick up FIS-B (Flight Information Service - Broadcast) data on 978 MHz, which includes: NEXRAD radar imagery (composite and regional), METARs and SPECIs, TAFs, PIREPs, SIGMETs and AIRMETs, Convective SIGMETs, winds and temperatures aloft, NOTAMs, and ATIS. Important limitations: NEXRAD imagery is 5-15 minutes old (never use for thunderstorm penetration), and coverage depends on proximity to ground-based transmitters. FIS-B supplements but does not replace a proper pre-flight briefing.
What is the difference between ForeFlight weather and an official briefing?
ForeFlight, Garmin Pilot, and similar EFB apps are approved sources for pre-flight weather when they connect to Leidos Flight Service (QICP-qualified). ForeFlight's briefing feature generates a legal weather briefing that satisfies FAR 91.103. The graphical interface makes it easier to visualize weather along your route. However, the telephone briefing from 1800wxbrief lets you discuss weather with a human specialist who can highlight nuances. Many experienced pilots use EFB apps for primary weather review and call Flight Service when conditions are marginal or complex.
How do I read winds aloft forecasts (FB)?
Winds aloft (FB — Winds and Temperatures Aloft Forecast) are reported as a 4-digit or 6-digit code: the first 2 digits are wind direction in tens of degrees, the next 2 are wind speed in knots, and the last 2 (if present) are temperature in Celsius. Example: 2714 = 270 degrees at 14 knots; 2725+07 = 270 degrees at 25 knots, temperature +7C. If the wind speed is 100-199 knots, 50 is added to the direction and 100 subtracted from speed (e.g., 7545 = 250 degrees at 145 knots). Winds at 3,000 ft are not forecast if the station elevation is within 1,500 ft. Temps are not forecast for the 3,000 ft level or if within 2,500 ft of station elevation.
What are the types of satellite imagery used in aviation?
Three types of satellite imagery are used: Visible imagery shows clouds by reflected sunlight (only available during daylight, best for identifying cloud type and coverage), Infrared (IR) imagery measures thermal radiation and shows cloud-top temperatures (available 24 hours, colder/higher tops appear brighter — critical for thunderstorm identification), and Water Vapor imagery shows moisture content in the mid and upper troposphere (reveals moisture patterns, jet stream location, and areas of potential convection even where clouds have not yet formed). Pilots should use all three together for a complete picture.
What does 'VFR flight not recommended' mean in a briefing?
When a Flight Service briefer says 'VFR flight not recommended' (VNR), it means current or forecast conditions along all or part of your route make safe VFR flight questionable. This is advisory — it does not prohibit VFR flight. However, it should be taken very seriously. Conditions typically include MVFR or IFR ceilings, reduced visibility, mountain obscuration, or convective activity. As PIC, the final go/no-go decision is yours, but the briefer's recommendation carries significant weight. Many accident chains begin with a pilot ignoring VNR.
How current are NEXRAD radar images on my iPad or in the cockpit?
NEXRAD radar images in the cockpit via ADS-B (FIS-B) are 5-15+ minutes old by the time they reach your display. This delay includes radar scan time, data processing, satellite uplink, and your receiver refresh rate. On ground-based apps (ForeFlight, etc.), data is typically 5-6 minutes old. This latency means NEXRAD should NEVER be used for real-time thunderstorm avoidance or penetration. A cell can grow or move several miles in 10 minutes. Use onboard weather radar (if equipped) or ATC guidance for tactical avoidance. Datalink weather is for strategic planning only.
What NOTAMs should I check before every flight?
Check these NOTAM categories: D-NOTAMs (airport/facility specific — runway closures, navaid outages, lighting), FDC NOTAMs (regulatory — TFRs, approach procedure changes, chart corrections), TFRs (Temporary Flight Restrictions — presidential movements, sporting events, wildfires, disaster areas, space launches), Center Area NOTAMs (ARTCC-specific), and Military NOTAMs. Pay special attention to TFRs, which can carry severe penalties for violation. Always check NOTAMs for your departure, destination, alternate, and any navaids along your route. FDC NOTAMs can modify published instrument approach procedures.
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