[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":398},["ShallowReactive",2],{"learn-\u002Flearn\u002Fminimum-heights-and-low-flying-rules":3,"learn-nav-\u002Flearn\u002Fminimum-heights-and-low-flying-rules":352},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"date":287,"dateModified":288,"description":289,"draft":290,"extension":291,"faqs":292,"howTo":288,"keyTakeaways":302,"meta":308,"metaDescription":309,"navigation":310,"path":311,"quiz":312,"seo":338,"series":339,"seriesOrder":277,"sources":340,"stem":349,"topic":350,"__hash__":351},"learn\u002Flearn\u002Fminimum-heights-and-low-flying-rules.md","Minimum heights and low-flying rules",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":275},"minimark",[9,13,19,24,36,65,69,76,93,104,111,115,118,135,148,152,160,175,178,182,198,202,205,212,219,226,230,264,268],[10,11,12],"p",{},"How low you may legally fly is one of the first limits a pilot meets, and one of the easiest to break without noticing. The rules are not about your performance or your nerve; they are about protecting people and property on the ground from the aircraft above them.",[14,15,16],"blockquote",{},[10,17,18],{},"This is general educational information, not operational, legal, or regulatory advice. Rules differ by authority and change over time. Always verify against current official sources and follow your operator's approved procedures.",[20,21,23],"h2",{"id":22},"two-minimums-not-one","Two minimums, not one",[10,25,26,27,31,32,35],{},"There are really two minimum heights hiding in the low-flying rules, and the answer to \"how low can I go\" depends on what is underneath you. Over ",[28,29,30],"strong",{},"congested areas and gatherings of people",", the floor is high, expressed as a height above the highest obstacle nearby. ",[28,33,34],{},"Everywhere else",", the floor is lower, expressed as a height above the ground or water. Both come with the same standing exception: the rule does not apply when it is necessary to take off or land, and the authority can grant permission for specific operations.",[10,37,38,39,46,47,52,53,58,59,64],{},"The international source is ",[40,41,45],"a",{"href":42,"rel":43},"https:\u002F\u002Fstore.icao.int\u002Fen\u002Fannex-2-rules-of-the-air",[44],"nofollow","ICAO Annex 2",", at 4.6. Europe enacts it as ",[40,48,51],{"href":49,"rel":50},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.easa.europa.eu\u002Fen\u002Fdocument-library\u002Feasy-access-rules\u002Feasy-access-rules-standardised-european-rules-air-sera",[44],"SERA.5005(f)",", which the UK retains in its own rules of the air and summarises in the ",[40,54,57],{"href":55,"rel":56},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.caa.co.uk\u002Fcap1535",[44],"UK CAA Skyway Code",". The United States sets out its version in ",[40,60,63],{"href":61,"rel":62},"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.ecfr.gov\u002Fcurrent\u002Ftitle-14\u002Fchapter-I\u002Fsubchapter-F\u002Fpart-91\u002Fsubpart-B\u002Fsection-91.119",[44],"14 CFR 91.119",". The structure is the same on both sides of the Atlantic; the numbers and the radii differ.",[20,66,68],{"id":67},"the-congested-area-rule","The congested-area rule",[10,70,71,72,75],{},"Over the congested areas of cities, towns or settlements, or over an open-air assembly of persons, the height is measured above the ",[28,73,74],{},"highest obstacle",", not above the ground, so a tall mast or building raises the floor for everyone near it.",[10,77,78,79,81,82,88,89,92],{},"Under ",[28,80,51],{}," and ICAO Annex 2, a ",[40,83,87],{"href":84,"className":85},"\u002Flearn\u002Fglossary#gt-vfr",[86],"glossary-link","VFR"," flight must stay at least ",[28,90,91],{},"1,000 ft (300 m) above the highest obstacle within a radius of 600 m"," from the aircraft. The UK frames its congested-area rule the same way, around 1,000 ft above the highest fixed obstacle within 600 m.",[10,94,95,96,99,100,103],{},"Under the ",[28,97,98],{},"FAA",", 14 CFR 91.119(b) requires at least ",[28,101,102],{},"1,000 ft above the highest obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 ft"," of the aircraft over any congested area. So both demand 1,000 ft above the tallest thing nearby; the difference is the radius that defines \"nearby\", 600 m for SERA against 2,000 ft for the FAA.",[10,105,106,107,110],{},"The ",[28,108,109],{},"open-air assembly"," is the part that catches people out. It is the gathering of people, not the presence of buildings, that the rule protects. A crowded beach, an outdoor festival, a packed sports ground or an air display crowd line can pull the congested-area height over a stretch of otherwise empty countryside. If there is a crowd below, assume the higher floor.",[20,112,114],{"id":113},"the-500-ft-rule-everywhere-else","The 500 ft rule everywhere else",[10,116,117],{},"Away from congested areas and assemblies, the floor drops, and here is where the two systems describe it slightly differently.",[10,119,78,120,122,123,126,127,130,131,134],{},[28,121,51],{},", a VFR flight must not be flown lower than ",[28,124,125],{},"500 ft (150 m) above the ground or water",", or lower than 500 ft (150 m) above the highest obstacle within 150 m of the aircraft. The UK keeps the well-known ",[28,128,129],{},"500 ft rule",": an aircraft must not be flown closer than ",[28,132,133],{},"500 ft to any person, vessel, vehicle or structure",", except for taking off and landing or with permission. That phrasing matters, because it is measured to the nearest person or object, not to the ground, so flying 500 ft above a field but 200 ft to the side of a farmhouse can still break it.",[10,136,95,137,139,140,143,144,147],{},[28,138,98],{},", 14 CFR 91.119(c) sets the minimum over other than congested areas at ",[28,141,142],{},"500 ft above the surface",", except over open water or sparsely populated areas, where instead you must not operate ",[28,145,146],{},"closer than 500 ft to any person, vessel, vehicle or structure",". The FAA also has an overriding rule in 91.119(a): everywhere, you must be high enough to make an emergency landing without undue hazard to people or property on the surface if the engine fails. Helicopters, powered parachutes and weight-shift-control aircraft are allowed lower under defined conditions if they create no hazard.",[20,149,151],{"id":150},"the-emergency-landing-rule-and-the-exceptions","The emergency-landing rule and the exceptions",[10,153,154,155,159],{},"The FAA adds a floor that sits underneath everything else. ",[40,156,158],{"href":61,"rel":157},[44],"14 CFR 91.119(a)"," requires that, everywhere, you fly high enough that if the engine quit you could make an emergency landing without undue hazard to people or property on the surface. That is not a number you can read off; it depends on your aircraft, your glide and what is below you, and on a single over a town it can be the most demanding floor of the three. SERA does not state it in quite the same words, but the airmanship is universal: do not put yourself somewhere a forced landing would harm people on the ground.",[10,161,162,163,166,167,170,171,174],{},"Both systems carve out the same standing exceptions. The minimum heights do not apply when it is necessary to ",[28,164,165],{},"take off or land",", which is why an approach legitimately brings you low over the ground near a runway. The authority can grant ",[28,168,169],{},"permission"," for specific low-level operations, such as agricultural work, pipeline inspection, police and air-ambulance tasks or displays, each with its own conditions. And ",[28,172,173],{},"helicopters"," are treated more flexibly: the FAA allows them below the fixed-wing minimums if the operation creates no hazard and the route is approved, recognising that a helicopter can land almost anywhere in an emergency. None of these exceptions is a free pass; each one replaces the general floor with a specific, conditional permission.",[10,176,177],{},"It is also worth knowing that authorities layer national rules on top. The UK rules of the air spell out a series of low-flying prohibitions and exceptions, and many countries publish noise-sensitive areas, national parks and bird sanctuaries with requested or mandatory minimum heights that are stricter than the general rule. The general minimum is the floor; the local rule can raise it.",[20,179,181],{"id":180},"how-this-differs-from-chart-minimum-altitudes","How this differs from chart minimum altitudes",[10,183,184,185,189,190,193,194,197],{},"It is easy to confuse the low-flying floor with the ",[40,186,188],{"href":187},"\u002Flearn\u002Fminimum-safe-altitudes-msa-mora-mea-moca","minimum safe altitudes printed on an enroute chart",", but they answer different questions. The low-flying rules protect ",[28,191,192],{},"people and property"," from the aircraft, and are measured against the surface, obstacles and crowds beneath you. The chart altitudes, the MSA, MORA, MEA and MOCA, protect the ",[28,195,196],{},"aircraft"," from terrain and obstacles and, for some of them, guarantee navigation signal reception along a route. When both apply, you fly to whichever is higher; satisfying one does not satisfy the other.",[20,199,201],{"id":200},"a-worked-example","A worked example",[10,203,204],{},"Picture a single VFR leg that crosses three kinds of ground in ten minutes.",[10,206,207,208,211],{},"First you cross a ",[28,209,210],{},"market town",". That is a congested area, so under SERA.5005(f) you must be at least 1,000 ft above the highest obstacle within 600 m, and there is a 400 ft church spire on your track, so your floor is 1,000 ft above the spire, not 1,000 ft above the rooftops. Under the FAA the same town needs 1,000 ft above the highest obstacle within a 2,000 ft radius.",[10,213,214,215,218],{},"Next you cross ",[28,216,217],{},"open farmland",". The town is behind you and there is no crowd below, so the elsewhere rule applies: at least 500 ft above the ground under SERA, and under the UK rule no closer than 500 ft to any person, vessel, vehicle or structure, which keeps you clear of the isolated farm buildings as well as the surface.",[10,220,221,222,225],{},"Finally you pass a ",[28,223,224],{},"crowded beach"," on a hot afternoon. There are no buildings, but the crowd is an open-air assembly of persons, so the congested-area minimum returns: 1,000 ft above the highest obstacle within the rule's radius, even though a moment earlier, over the empty fields, 500 ft was legal. The ground barely changed; the people below it changed the rule.",[20,227,229],{"id":228},"common-pitfalls","Common pitfalls",[231,232,233,240,246,252,258],"ul",{},[234,235,236,239],"li",{},[28,237,238],{},"Measuring above the ground in a congested area."," The congested-area rule is measured above the highest obstacle nearby, so a mast or spire raises the floor.",[234,241,242,245],{},[28,243,244],{},"Forgetting open-air assemblies."," A crowd in the open can demand the congested-area height with no buildings in sight.",[234,247,248,251],{},[28,249,250],{},"Reading the 500 ft rule as a height only."," The UK and FAA versions are also a distance from any person, vessel, vehicle or structure, so you can be high enough yet too close sideways.",[234,253,254,257],{},[28,255,256],{},"Confusing it with chart minimum altitudes."," Low-flying floors and the MSA, MORA, MEA and MOCA are separate; fly the higher when both apply.",[234,259,260,263],{},[28,261,262],{},"Assuming the radius is the same everywhere."," SERA uses 600 m; the FAA uses 2,000 ft. Use the rule for the airspace you are in.",[20,265,267],{"id":266},"in-pilot-efb","In Pilot EFB",[10,269,270,271,274],{},"Pilot EFB is a study and planning companion for the rules of the air, helping you think through the limits before you fly alongside your ",[40,272,273],{"href":187},"chart minimum altitudes"," and the rest of your offline-first briefing. It does not measure your height above the ground, judge what is congested, or tell you when you are too low, and the binding minimum heights are those in the current rules for your airspace. Pilot EFB is not a certified Electronic Flight Bag, so treat it as a study and planning aid and fly the heights from your official source of record.",{"title":276,"searchDepth":277,"depth":277,"links":278},"",2,[279,280,281,282,283,284,285,286],{"id":22,"depth":277,"text":23},{"id":67,"depth":277,"text":68},{"id":113,"depth":277,"text":114},{"id":150,"depth":277,"text":151},{"id":180,"depth":277,"text":181},{"id":200,"depth":277,"text":201},{"id":228,"depth":277,"text":229},{"id":266,"depth":277,"text":267},"2026-04-08",null,"How low you may legally fly: the congested-area and 500 ft rules, the open-air assembly trap, and how SERA.5005 and 14 CFR 91.119 compare.",false,"md",[293,296,299],{"q":294,"a":295},"How low can I fly over open countryside?","Away from congested areas, both systems set the floor at 500 ft. Under SERA.5005(f) a VFR flight must stay at least 500 ft (150 m) above the ground or water elsewhere than over congested areas. Under 14 CFR 91.119(c) the minimum over other than congested areas is 500 ft above the surface, and over open water or sparsely populated areas you must stay at least 500 ft from any person, vessel, vehicle or structure. Both have exceptions for taking off and landing.",{"q":297,"a":298},"What counts as a congested area?","The congested-area rule covers the congested areas of cities, towns or settlements, and an open-air assembly of persons. The open-air assembly part is the trap: a crowded beach, an outdoor concert or a sports gathering can trigger the congested-area height even out in the countryside, because it is the gathering of people, not the buildings, that the rule protects.",{"q":300,"a":301},"Is this the same as the minimum safe altitude on my chart?","No. Low-flying rules set a legal floor for how close you may come to people and the surface. The minimum safe altitudes on an enroute chart, such as the MSA, MORA, MEA and MOCA, are about terrain and obstacle clearance and signal reception on a route. They are different ideas with different sources, and you fly to whichever is higher when both apply.",[303,304,305,306,307],"Over congested areas, SERA.5005(f) requires 1,000 ft (300 m) above the highest obstacle within 600 m; the FAA's 91.119 uses a 2,000 ft radius.","Elsewhere the floor is 500 ft above the ground or water, with the UK and FAA also measuring 500 ft from any person, vessel, vehicle or structure.","An open-air assembly of persons can trigger the congested-area height even over open countryside.","The FAA adds an overriding rule to always be able to make an emergency landing without undue hazard.","Low-flying floors are separate from the chart minimum altitudes; fly the higher when both apply.",{},"How low you may legally fly: the congested-area rule, the 500 ft rule, the open-air assembly trap, and how SERA.5005 and 14 CFR 91.119 compare.",true,"\u002Flearn\u002Fminimum-heights-and-low-flying-rules",[313,322,330],{"q":314,"options":315,"answer":320,"explanation":321},"Under SERA.5005(f), how high must a VFR flight be over a congested area of a town?",[316,317,318,319],"500 ft above the ground","1,000 ft (300 m) above the highest obstacle within 600 m of the aircraft","2,000 ft above mean sea level","1,500 ft above the nearest aerodrome",1,"SERA.5005(f) requires at least 1,000 ft (300 m) above the highest obstacle within a radius of 600 m from the aircraft over the congested areas of cities, towns or settlements, or over an open-air assembly of persons.",{"q":323,"options":324,"answer":320,"explanation":329},"What is the horizontal radius in the FAA's congested-area rule?",[325,326,327,328],"600 metres","2,000 feet","1,000 feet","5 nautical miles","Under 14 CFR 91.119(b), over a congested area you must be at least 1,000 ft above the highest obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 ft of the aircraft. SERA states the radius as 600 m instead.",{"q":331,"options":332,"answer":320,"explanation":337},"Which of these can trigger the congested-area minimum height even out in the countryside?",[333,334,335,336],"A single farmhouse","An open-air assembly of persons, such as a crowd at an outdoor event","A motorway with light traffic","A reservoir","The congested-area rule protects open-air assemblies of persons as well as cities and towns, so a crowd gathered outdoors can require the higher minimum height even away from built-up areas.",{"title":5,"description":289},"rules-of-the-air",[341,343,345,347],{"label":342,"url":42},"ICAO Annex 2: Rules of the Air (4.6 Minimum heights)",{"label":344,"url":49},"EASA Easy Access Rules for Standardised European Rules of the Air (SERA.5005(f))",{"label":346,"url":55},"UK CAA Skyway Code (CAP 1535): low flying",{"label":348,"url":61},"FAA 14 CFR 91.119 (Minimum safe altitudes: general)","learn\u002Fminimum-heights-and-low-flying-rules","Regulations","H3Fktaq7cL3QSYkcXLmKi0apFgEGsrldeS326i6JwBM",{"related":353,"newer":371,"older":378,"series":384},[354,360,365],{"path":355,"title":356,"description":357,"date":358,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":359,"series":288,"seriesOrder":288},"\u002Flearn\u002Fclass-and-type-ratings-explained","Class and type ratings explained","Class rating versus type rating, what each lets you fly, and how EASA's revalidated ratings compare with the FAA's certificate-based system.","2026-06-11",7,{"path":361,"title":362,"description":363,"date":364,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":359,"series":288,"seriesOrder":288},"\u002Flearn\u002Fmedical-certificates-explained","Medical certificates explained","The classes of aviation medical and what each allows: the FAA's first, second and third class against EASA's Class 1, Class 2 and LAPL, with validity by age.","2026-05-30",{"path":366,"title":367,"description":368,"date":369,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":359,"series":339,"seriesOrder":370},"\u002Flearn\u002Faircraft-lights-and-when-to-show-them","Position and anti-collision lights","An aircraft's navigation and anti-collision lights, the red-left green-right convention, when each must be shown, and how SERA.3215 and 14 CFR 91.209 compare.","2026-05-19",6,{"path":372,"title":373,"description":374,"date":375,"topic":376,"draft":290,"minutes":377,"series":288,"seriesOrder":288},"\u002Flearn\u002Fholding-patterns-explained","Holding patterns explained","The standard holding pattern, how the legs are timed, the three entry procedures, and the maximum holding speeds, with ICAO and FAA figures attributed.","2026-04-09","Operations",4,{"path":379,"title":380,"description":381,"date":382,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":377,"series":383,"seriesOrder":277},"\u002Flearn\u002Fflight-time-limitations-explained","Flight time limitations explained","Flight time, duty, flight duty period and rest explained, with the EASA\u002FUK CAA and FAA limits attributed. Numbers differ, so check the current rule.","2026-04-07","duty-rest-and-flight-time-limits",{"slug":339,"title":385,"part":277,"total":370,"prev":386,"next":392},"Rules of the air",{"path":387,"title":388,"description":389,"date":390,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":391,"series":339,"seriesOrder":320},"\u002Flearn\u002Fright-of-way-rules","Right-of-way rules in the air","Who gives way when two aircraft meet: the converging, head-on and overtaking rules, the category hierarchy, and how SERA.3210 and 14 CFR 91.113 line up.","2026-03-26",8,{"path":393,"title":394,"description":395,"date":396,"topic":350,"draft":290,"minutes":359,"series":339,"seriesOrder":397},"\u002Flearn\u002Fspecial-vfr-explained","Special VFR explained","What a special VFR clearance is, the visibility and cloud conditions that come with it, the day and night limits, and how SERA.5010 and 14 CFR 91.157 differ.","2026-04-19",3,1782839405705]