Definition
A company, originally formed by U.S. airlines in 1929, that develops and publishes industry standards for aviation electronics, data formats, and communications. Its specifications — most notably ARINC 424 — define the standardized format used to encode navigation data (waypoints, airways, procedures, approaches) in airborne navigation databases worldwide.
Plain English
ARINC is the organization that sets the common rules for how navigation information is written into the databases used by aircraft avionics. Because of these rules, navigation data from any approved provider can be loaded into any compatible flight management system and read correctly.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of aircraft navigation databases, database updates, and how instrument procedures are coded for cockpit navigation systems.
Derivation
The name comes from 'Aeronautical Radio,' reflecting the company's original purpose in 1929: managing radio communications for the airline industry. Its role expanded over the decades into setting technical standards for nearly all airborne electronics and data systems.
Why Pilots Care
ARINC standards ensure navigation databases load correctly and function consistently across different aircraft and avionics manufacturers.
Intuition Check
ARINC is not a radio you tune in the cockpit. In this context, it is mainly a standards name for how aviation navigation data is organized.
Example Sentence 1
The navigation database in the FMS is built to ARINC 424 specifications, which is why the same approach plate codes correctly whether the aircraft is a Boeing or an Airbus.
Example Sentence 2
Database providers follow ARINC standards to keep approach and airway information compatible with cockpit equipment.