Definition
Airworthiness Directives are legally binding regulatory notices issued by the FAA when an unsafe condition exists in an aircraft, engine, propeller, or appliance, and that condition is likely to exist or develop in other items of the same design. ADs prescribe the inspections, repairs, modifications, or operating limitations required to correct the condition. Compliance is mandatory before further flight unless the AD itself permits continued operation under stated conditions.
Plain English
An AD is an order from the FAA telling owners and operators that something has been found to be unsafe on a particular type of aircraft or part, and exactly what must be done about it. If an AD applies to your aircraft, you must comply with it — it is not optional.
Context Anchor
Pilots encounter ADs when reviewing aircraft maintenance records before flight, especially during a preflight assessment of whether the aircraft is legal and safe to operate.
Derivation
‘Airworthy’ means fit and safe to fly. ‘Directive’ comes from the Latin dirigere, ‘to direct or order.’ So an Airworthiness Directive is literally a direct order from the FAA to keep the aircraft fit to fly.
Why Pilots Care
Compliance with every applicable AD is required before flight; failure to comply renders the aircraft unairworthy and illegal to operate.
Analogy
An AD is like a mandatory safety recall for an aircraft, but with aviation legal force behind it. If it applies, it is not optional.
Intuition Check
Do not read directive as a suggestion or general recommendation. In this FAA use, a directive is a required safety order that must be followed when it applies.
Example Sentence 1
During the preflight review of the maintenance logbook, the pilot confirmed that all applicable ADs had been signed off by an authorized mechanic.
Example Sentence 2
An airworthiness directive required replacement of the elevator hinge bolts within the next 25 flight hours.