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METAR Decoder

Paste any METAR weather report and get an instant plain-English breakdown of every field, plus flight category.

Weather study path

Turn this METAR into a complete weather decision

Decode the report, then connect it to forecast timing, density altitude, pilot reports, and area hazards.

Daily weather mastery loop

Do one cockpit weather rep, not one random decode.

Paste a report, decode it, then turn the result into one short study rep.

Brief

Decode the report

Translate the raw METAR into ceiling, visibility, wind, pressure, weather, and flight category.

Decide

Write the go/no-go call

Name the real decision: VFR, marginal VFR, IFR, alternate needed, delay, or no-go.

Repair

Drill the weak link

Turn the confusing part into one quiz set, one tutor question, and one flashcard review.

Repeat

Come back tomorrow

Weather judgment compounds when you run the same cockpit scan for a new airport every day.

Saved weather trap bank

Make the decoder remember what almost tricked you.

A one-time decode is useful. A saved trap bank is what brings a pilot back tomorrow: ceiling, visibility, gusts, spread, weather codes, pressure, forecast trend, and alternates.

0

traps saved

0

weak signals

Ceiling trap

BKN, OVC, or VV near a minimum

Name the lowest ceiling, category, cloud clearance, and whether this is legal or smart for the mission.

Visibility trap

3SM, BR, FG, HZ, or M/P visibility groups

Separate legal visibility from practical margin and identify mist/fog deterioration risk.

Gust / crosswind trap

Gust factor, VRB wind, or runway mismatch

Turn wind into a runway decision before treating the METAR as safe.

Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Spread 0-3C, mist, fog, or night cooling

Use the spread as an early warning, not trivia.

Weather code trap

TS, SH, FZ, RA, SN, SQ, or VC groups

Translate the code and say what operational hazard it creates.

Pressure / density trap

High temp, low pressure, hot-and-high field

Connect altimeter and temperature to performance, not only the weather category.

TAF trend trap

METAR looks fine but the forecast may not

Compare current weather with timing, TEMPO, FM, and PROB groups.

Alternate / escape trap

Marginal destination, low ceiling, low visibility, or fuel pressure

Turn the decoded report into an alternate and fuel decision.

20-rep repair exam

Start with the four highest-frequency weather traps

The point is not to read another explanation. It is to make 20 small go/no-go calls until the trap becomes automatic.

Start next decode

Rep 1: Ceiling trap

Find the lowest BKN/OVC/VV layer and write the flight category. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 2: Visibility trap

Explain BR versus FG and the visibility threshold that separates them. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 3: Gust / crosswind trap

Name one personal minimum that should tighten when gusts appear. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 4: Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Tie the spread to Part 107 or PPL go/no-go margin. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 5: Ceiling trap

Find the lowest BKN/OVC/VV layer and write the flight category. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 6: Visibility trap

Explain BR versus FG and the visibility threshold that separates them. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 7: Gust / crosswind trap

Name one personal minimum that should tighten when gusts appear. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 8: Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Tie the spread to Part 107 or PPL go/no-go margin. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 9: Ceiling trap

Find the lowest BKN/OVC/VV layer and write the flight category. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 10: Visibility trap

Explain BR versus FG and the visibility threshold that separates them. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 11: Gust / crosswind trap

Name one personal minimum that should tighten when gusts appear. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 12: Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Tie the spread to Part 107 or PPL go/no-go margin. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 13: Ceiling trap

Find the lowest BKN/OVC/VV layer and write the flight category. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 14: Visibility trap

Explain BR versus FG and the visibility threshold that separates them. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 15: Gust / crosswind trap

Name one personal minimum that should tighten when gusts appear. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 16: Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Tie the spread to Part 107 or PPL go/no-go margin. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 17: Ceiling trap

Find the lowest BKN/OVC/VV layer and write the flight category. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 18: Visibility trap

Explain BR versus FG and the visibility threshold that separates them. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 19: Gust / crosswind trap

Name one personal minimum that should tighten when gusts appear. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Rep 20: Temp/dewpoint spread trap

Tie the spread to Part 107 or PPL go/no-go margin. Use today's station and the decoded UNKNOWN category as your starting point.

Weather study kit

If you are using this decoder to prep for flights or exams, these are the practical references and cockpit tools that match the workflow.

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Read the aviation weather guide

METAR Weather Abbreviation Reference

Common weather codes used in METAR reports. Combine intensity prefixes (+/-) with weather phenomena (e.g., +TSRA = heavy thunderstorm with rain).

CodeMeaning
RARain
SNSnow
FGFog
BRMist
HZHaze
TSThunderstorm
SHShowers
DZDrizzle
GRHail
GSSmall Hail
FZFreezing
PLIce Pellets
ICIce Crystals
FUSmoke
VAVolcanic Ash
SQSquall
+Heavy
-Light
VCVicinity
BLBlowing

Get the METAR/TAF exam cheat sheet

We will send the weather-code traps, VFR/IFR minimums, and a short drill for the report formats that show up on written exams.

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Master Aviation Weather

METAR decoding is a high-yield weather skill on the Instrument Rating written. Drill IFR weather questions now while weather is top-of-mind.

Instrument prep - $9.99 one-time

Or get every exam track for 60 days with the $39 All-5 Bundle.

Build the weather habit

Decode it, brief it, then keep the right cockpit references nearby.

Most METAR mistakes happen after translation: missed trend, weak alternate logic, or no written plan. These are the practical next tools pilots pair with weather study and cockpit decisions.

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Get the cockpit weather scan checklist

Save the quick METAR, TAF, NOTAM, alternate, and fuel-risk scan pilots use before turning a weather report into a go/no-go decision.

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Cockpit weather kit

Turn a decoded METAR into a real go/no-go briefing

The decoder tells you what the report says. The next step is building the habit pilots actually use: current weather, forecast trend, chart context, alternates, fuel risk, and a written decision before the airplane moves.

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Rotate Pilot may receive a commission on items you buy through our links at no extra cost to you. Prices and availability change.

Aviation weather textbook

ASA Aviation Weather / FAA Weather Handbook

Use this when the decoder gives you the plain-English answer but you want to understand the why behind clouds, fronts, icing, and thunderstorms.

Find weather books on Amazon

Chart legend backup

FAA Aeronautical Chart User's Guide

Pair METAR and TAF decoding with chart symbols, obstacles, airspace, and alternate planning details.

Find chart guides on Amazon

In-flight weather feed

Portable ADS-B receiver

For cockpit weather awareness after preflight: NEXRAD, METARs, TAFs, traffic, and backup attitude depending on the device.

Compare receivers on Amazon

Briefing workflow

Pilot kneeboard or cockpit notebook

Keep decoded weather, ATIS, alternates, fuel notes, and minimums in one place before taxi.

See kneeboards on Amazon

Frequently Asked Questions

What does METAR stand for?

METAR stands for Meteorological Aerodrome Report (from French: Météorologique Aviation Régulière). It is a standardized format for reporting weather at airports, issued every hour or when conditions change significantly (SPECI).

How do you read wind in a METAR?

Wind is reported as a 5-digit group: first 3 digits are direction (magnetic), last 2 are speed in knots. For example, 27015KT means wind from 270° at 15 knots. Gusts are shown with G (e.g., 27015G25KT).

What does VV mean in a METAR?

VV stands for Vertical Visibility, used when the sky is obscured (fog, heavy precipitation). VV003 means vertical visibility is 300 feet. This indicates you cannot see the sky — only straight up to 300 feet.

What is the difference between METAR and TAF?

METAR reports current weather conditions at an airport. TAF (Terminal Aerodrome Forecast) predicts weather for the next 24-30 hours. Both use similar notation but TAFs include forecast periods and expected changes.

How often are METARs updated?

Routine METARs are issued every hour (usually at 55 minutes past the hour). Special METARs (SPECI) are issued when conditions change significantly — such as visibility dropping below minimums or wind shifting.

How to Read a METAR

A METAR (Meteorological Aerodrome Report) is a standardized format for reporting weather observations at airports. Every METAR follows the same structure:

TYPE STATION DATE/TIME WIND VISIBILITY WEATHER CLOUDS TEMP/DEW ALTIMETER RMK
  • Station — 4-letter ICAO code (e.g., KJFK, EGLL, KLAX)
  • Date/Time — DDHHMMz format in UTC (e.g., 121856Z = 12th day at 18:56 UTC)
  • Wind — Direction (3 digits) + speed (2 digits) in knots, with optional gusts (e.g., 31015G25KT)
  • Visibility — In statute miles (10SM) for US, or meters (9999 = 10km+) for ICAO
  • Weather — Phenomena codes like RA (rain), SN (snow), FG (fog), TS (thunderstorm)
  • Clouds — Coverage + height in hundreds of feet AGL (e.g., SCT040 = scattered at 4,000 ft)
  • Temp/Dewpoint — In Celsius, M prefix for negative (e.g., M02/M17 = -2°C / -17°C)
  • Altimeter — A followed by inHg (A3042) or Q followed by hPa (Q1024)
  • Remarks — Everything after RMK contains additional meteorological details

Pilots use METARs to determine flight category (VFR, MVFR, IFR, LIFR) based on ceiling height and visibility. This is critical for go/no-go decisions, approach planning, and alternate airport selection.

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