Definition
An FAA-operated facility that provides pilots with preflight and in-flight services, including weather briefings, flight plan filing and activation, NOTAM information, search and rescue initiation, and assistance to aircraft in distress. AFSS facilities use computerized systems to consolidate data from many sources and deliver it through specialists who communicate with pilots by phone, radio, or online tools.
Plain English
An FAA station, staffed by specialists, that pilots contact to get weather, file flight plans, and receive other information needed before and during a flight.
Context Anchor
Seen when a pilot is checking weather, ceiling, visibility, airport conditions, or flight plan information before departure or while en route.
Derivation
The word 'automated' was added when the FAA modernized the older Flight Service Station network in the 1980s by computerizing data handling. The 'automated' part refers to the computer systems that gather and organize the information — the briefings themselves are still given by human specialists.
Why Pilots Care
AFSS supplies the weather and NOTAM data required for legal and safe departure decisions, especially when ceilings or visibility are marginal.
Intuition Check
Do not read “automated” as meaning there is no human help. In this term, it means the flight service station uses automated information systems to support the services it provides.
Example Sentence 1
Before departure, the pilot called AFSS to receive a standard weather briefing and file an IFR flight plan.
Example Sentence 2
AFSS relayed the latest NOTAMs affecting the destination airport during the preflight call.