Definition
Controlled airspace designated to extend from the surface of the earth upward, established at airports without an operating control tower to provide controlled airspace for instrument approach and departure procedures. It is depicted on aeronautical charts by a dashed magenta line surrounding the airport.
Plain English
A pocket of controlled airspace that starts at ground level around certain non-towered airports, put there so that aircraft flying instrument approaches into and departures out of those airports stay inside controlled airspace the whole way.
Context Anchor
Seen on aeronautical charts and in instrument procedure discussions, including helicopter Point-in-Space approaches that depend on whether controlled airspace reaches the surface.
Derivation
The FAA divides airspace into classes A through G. Class E is the general category of controlled airspace that isn't A, B, C, or D. The phrase 'surface area' simply means this particular piece of Class E reaches all the way down to the ground, rather than starting at 700 ft or 1,200 ft AGL like most Class E does.
Why Pilots Care
Determines when an ATC clearance is required and how IFR traffic is separated near nontowered airports.
Grounding Statement
Picture the airport sitting inside an invisible column of regulated air that begins at the runway or landing area instead of starting higher up.
Intuition Check
Do not read “surface area” as a patch of land on the airport. Here it means a volume of airspace whose lower edge begins at the earth’s surface.
Example Sentence 1
Because the airport sits inside a Class E surface area, the pilot needed at least 3 statute miles visibility to depart VFR.
Example Sentence 2
Pilots must contact ATC before entering Class E surface area airspace to conduct an IFR arrival at the nontowered airport.