Definition
Automated Flight Service Stations are FAA-operated facilities that provide pilots with preflight and in-flight services, including weather briefings, flight plan filing and activation, search and rescue initiation, and assistance with navigation aid status, NOTAMs, and other advisories. AFSS specialists communicate with pilots by telephone on the ground and by radio in flight, and they are a primary point of contact for general aviation pilots operating under both VFR and IFR.
Plain English
AFSS are FAA stations you call or radio to get weather, file a flight plan, or get help in the air. They are not air traffic control — they are the people who give pilots the information they need before and during a flight.
Context Anchor
Seen when checking current information about navigation facilities, weather, flight plans, or other conditions before or during a flight.
Derivation
‘Automated’ here refers to the modernization and consolidation of older Flight Service Stations into a smaller number of facilities supported by computer systems. The word does not mean robotic or unmanned — humans still answer the phone and the radio.
Why Pilots Care
AFSS services supply the weather and planning information pilots need to make safe go/no-go decisions and to stay informed during flight.
Intuition Check
“Automated” does not mean the service is only a robot or that no pilot judgment is needed. Here it means the flight service system uses computerized tools to gather and deliver current flight information.
Example Sentence 1
Before the cross-country flight, the student called AFSS for a standard weather briefing and filed a VFR flight plan.
Example Sentence 2
After departure the crew contacted AFSS on the radio for updated en route conditions.