Definition
A precision instrument approach and landing with a decision height not lower than 200 feet above the touchdown zone elevation and with either a visibility not less than 1/2 statute mile or a runway visual range not less than 1,800 feet. Category I (CAT I) approaches use ground-based or satellite-based navigation guidance that provides both lateral and vertical course information, such as ILS, LPV, or GLS.
Plain English
The most common kind of precision approach. The pilot can fly down to 200 feet above the runway in the clouds, and must be able to see at least half a mile (or 1,800 feet down the runway) to land. If they can't see the runway by then, they have to go around.
Context Anchor
Seen in operations specifications for helicopter IFR operations, where an operator’s approved kinds of instrument approaches are listed.
Derivation
Precision' here means the approach gives both lateral guidance (left/right) and vertical guidance (up/down) — as opposed to a non-precision approach, which gives only lateral guidance. 'Category I' is simply the first and least demanding tier in a three-tier system (CAT I, II, III), where each higher category allows lower minimums and requires more capable equipment, training, and runway infrastructure.
Why Pilots Care
Tells the pilot the lowest weather conditions under which the helicopter is legally allowed to complete a precision approach and land.
Grounding Statement
On the final part of the approach, the instruments guide the aircraft down a defined path until the pilot reaches the decision point and must decide whether the runway or landing area is visible enough to continue.
Intuition Check
Do not read “Category I” as a quality rating or difficulty level. Here it is a specific FAA class of precision approach minimums. Do not read “precision” as simply “very accurate.” Here it means the approach provides both alignment guidance and descent-path guidance.
Example Sentence 1
The weather was reporting a 300-foot ceiling and 3/4 mile visibility, well above CAT I minimums, so we briefed the ILS and continued the approach.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot briefed the Category I Precision Instrument Approach Procedures minima before beginning the ILS approach in marginal weather.