An AIRMET is a weather advisory issued to inform pilots of moderate or potentially hazardous weather conditions that may affect the safety of flight — particularly for light aircraft and VFR operations. AIRMETs cover less severe conditions than SIGMETs, but they are still operationally significant.
AIRMETs are especially useful for general aviation, training flights, and low-level VFR traffic.
Condition | Description |
---|---|
Moderate turbulence | Below SIGMET levels, often due to wind shear or terrain |
Moderate icing | Affecting aircraft without anti-ice protection |
Widespread mountain obscuration | Clouds, fog, or snow limiting visibility |
Surface winds > 30 kt | Risk to light aircraft during takeoff/landing |
Widespread low visibility or ceilings | Below VFR minima in large regions |
Thunderstorms in isolated areas | Not meeting SIGMET severity |
AIRMETs are usually structured similarly to SIGMETs but may vary by national meteorological authority. A typical AIRMET includes:
Example:
AIRMET SIERRA VALID 081000/081400
FOR AUSTRIA FIR
MTN OBSC DUE TO CLDS AND FOG
TOPS FL080
MOV E 25KT
Translation:
Type | Code | Condition |
---|---|---|
SIERRA | S | Mountain obscuration, IFR conditions |
TANGO | T | Moderate turbulence, strong surface winds |
ZULU | Z | Moderate icing conditions |