Safety Management System
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://airlinefyi.com/iframe/glossary/safety-management-system/" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/safety-management-system/
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/safety-management-system/)
Use the native HTML custom element.
Safety Management System
Definition
Systematic framework airlines use to identify hazards, assess risks, and implement safety improvements
A Safety Management System is a formal, organization-wide framework that systematically identifies hazards, assesses and manages risks, and continuously monitors the safety performance of an aviation organization. SMS is not a checklist or a software program but a management philosophy embedded into the operational culture and governance structure of an airline, airport, or maintenance organization. ICAO mandated SMS for civil aviation service providers through Amendment 33 to Annex 6, requiring implementation by states beginning in 2009, and the FAA codified SMS requirements for US airlines in a final rule published in 2024.
What Is a Safety Management System?
ICAO defines SMS as having four main components. The first is safety policy, which establishes the organization's commitment to safety, defines safety accountabilities, and creates a safety culture where employees can report hazards without fear of punitive action. The second is safety risk management, the process of identifying hazards in operations and infrastructure, analyzing the probability and severity of potential accidents, and implementing controls to reduce risk to an acceptable level. The third is safety assurance, which monitors the effectiveness of risk controls through audits, investigations, safety performance indicators, and trend analysis. The fourth is safety promotion, which involves training, communication, and culture-building activities that reinforce safety knowledge and a proactive safety mindset across the organization.
How It Works in Practice
The centerpiece of an effective SMS is a Voluntary Safety Reporting System — known in the US as Aviation Safety Action Programs (ASAP) for airlines and Flight Operational Quality Assurance (FOQA) programs for flight data monitoring. ASAP allows pilots, mechanics, dispatchers, and other employees to report safety concerns, mistakes, and near-misses without fear of FAA enforcement action or discipline, in exchange for providing information that the airline's safety department can analyze for systemic risk. FOQA programs automatically analyze digital flight data from every flight, flagging exceedances of defined parameters — a hard landing beyond the structural limits, an approach flown outside stabilized approach criteria, or a configuration deviation — that the crew may not have reported and that may not have caused an incident but represent a risk pattern requiring intervention.
Why It Matters
SMS has fundamentally shifted aviation safety strategy from reactive (investigating accidents after they happen) to proactive (identifying and eliminating hazards before they cause accidents). The commercial aviation safety record improvement over the last 30 years — a fatal accident rate roughly 90 percent lower in the 2010s than in the 1990s — is partly attributable to the widespread adoption of SMS principles. Airlines with mature SMS cultures catch systemic problems — a crew training deficiency, a maintenance procedure ambiguity, a ground handling risk — months or years before they contribute to an accident. The 2009 Colgan Air Flight 3407 crash, which killed 50 people near Buffalo, New York, exposed failures in the airline's safety culture that an effective SMS with functioning voluntary reporting might have surfaced earlier.
Key Facts and Figures
- ICAO Amendment 33 to Annex 6 made SMS mandatory for commercial air operators, airports, and air navigation service providers, with implementation required from 2009.
- The FAA's SMS final rule (published January 2024) requires US Part 121 carriers to implement a certified SMS by 2026.
- Airlines with voluntary reporting programs such as ASAP typically receive 10 to 30 times more safety reports per employee than airlines without such programs.
- FOQA programs analyze dozens to hundreds of flight parameters per flight; a large airline may generate terabytes of flight data per day.
- The Commercial Aviation Safety Team (CAST) — a joint industry-government SMS predecessor body — is credited with reducing the US commercial aviation fatality risk by 83 percent between 1998 and 2008.
- A mature SMS requires measurable Safety Performance Indicators (SPIs) reviewed quarterly by senior leadership.
Related Concepts
FAA, ICAO, ASAP, FOQA, Crew Resource Management, Airworthiness Directive
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Safety Management System (SMS)?
What does SMS stand for?
Why is Safety Management System (SMS) 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)
- Airworthiness Directive (AD)
- Type Certificate (TC)
- Single-Pilot Operations (SPO)
Explore on Sister Sites
-
Airport Glossary ↗
Aviation terms for airports, routes, and air traffic control
-
Aircraft Glossary ↗
150 aircraft and aviation technology terms