Airworthiness Directive
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Airworthiness Directive
Definition
Mandatory instruction from aviation authorities requiring inspections or modifications to aircraft
An Airworthiness Directive is a legally enforceable regulation issued by a national aviation authority requiring operators of specified aircraft, engines, propellers, or appliances to perform mandatory inspections, modifications, part replacements, or operational limitations within defined timeframes. Airworthiness directives are the primary regulatory tool by which aviation authorities respond to discovered unsafe conditions in the fleet — a crack propagation pattern found in aging wing structures, a software logic error in flight control computers, a fuel system vulnerability revealed by a non-fatal incident — before those conditions cause accidents.
What Is an Airworthiness Directive?
When an unsafe condition is discovered in a certified aircraft product, the responsible civil aviation authority has several options: it can issue guidance material, it can work with the manufacturer on a service bulletin, or it can issue an airworthiness directive that makes corrective action mandatory and legally binding on all operators of the affected aircraft registered in that country. FAA airworthiness directives are published in the Code of Federal Regulations under 14 CFR Parts 39, 91, 121, and 135, and in the FAA's daily Federal Register notices. Each AD specifies the affected aircraft by model and serial number range, describes the unsafe condition, prescribes the required action, sets compliance deadlines (typically expressed as a number of flight cycles or flight hours after the AD's effective date, or as a calendar date), and may permit alternative methods of compliance if the prescribed fix is not yet available.
How It Works in Practice
The airworthiness directive process typically begins with a manufacturer's Service Bulletin (SB), which is voluntary, and escalates to an AD when the authority determines that the condition poses an unacceptable risk. For US-manufactured aircraft like Boeing and Cessna products, the FAA issues the primary AD; EASA issues a parallel directive for European-registered operators, typically referencing the FAA AD and often adopting identical requirements under the bilateral safety agreement. When the Boeing 737 MAX was grounded in March 2019, the mechanism was an emergency AD issued by the FAA on March 13, 2019, formally prohibiting operation of all 737 MAX variants pending resolution of the MCAS software issue — the same AD mechanism used for far more mundane fixes like mandated inspection of a specific bolt pattern on landing gear doors.
Why It Matters
The AD system is the critical feedback loop that connects accident investigation findings to fleet-wide safety improvements. When an NTSB investigation reveals a structural issue, the FAA can issue an emergency AD within days and a final rule within months, requiring action on every registered aircraft before the problem recurs. The system's effectiveness depends on rigorous operator compliance and FAA oversight of that compliance: ADs are checked during line maintenance audits, during major structural inspections, and during FAA certificate management oversight. Airlines that fail to comply with ADs face civil penalties, certificate actions, and operating restrictions. The 737 MAX grounding AD — the highest-profile airworthiness directive in modern aviation history — affected approximately 400 aircraft in the United States and nearly 800 worldwide at the time of issuance.
Key Facts and Figures
- The FAA issues approximately 1,000 airworthiness directives per year covering aircraft, engines, propellers, and appliances.
- Emergency ADs, issued without the standard notice-and-comment period when an unsafe condition is immediately hazardous, typically take effect within days of publication.
- The Boeing 737 MAX grounding AD (2019-03-13 Emergency AD) was in effect for 20 months — the longest grounding of a commercial aircraft type in FAA history.
- EASA issues approximately 1,500 airworthiness directives annually under its own numbering system, frequently harmonized with FAA ADs.
- Operators must maintain records demonstrating AD compliance for the life of the aircraft.
- Compliance with an AD can be confirmed by an alternative method of compliance (AMOC) if the operator demonstrates to the authority that the alternative provides an equivalent level of safety.
Related Concepts
FAA, EASA, Type Certificate, Black Box, Boeing 737 MAX, Service Bulletin
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Airworthiness Directive (AD)?
What does AD stand for?
Why is Airworthiness Directive (AD) important in aviation?
Safety & Regulation
- IATA (IATA)
- ICAO (ICAO)
- Bilateral Air Service Agreement (ASA)
- Airspace Classification
- Open Skies Agreement
- FAA (FAA)
- EASA (EASA)
- Wake Turbulence
- IOSA (IOSA)
- Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS)
- Freedoms of the Air
- Cabotage
- Air Traffic Control (ATC)
- CAT III Landing
- EU261 (EU261)
- Bird Strike
- DOT Regulation
- Black Box / Flight Recorder (FDR/CVR)
- NOTAM (NOTAM)
- Safety Management System (SMS)
- Type Certificate (TC)
- Single-Pilot Operations (SPO)
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