Definition
An operational pitfall in which a pilot operating under Visual Flight Rules (VFR) presses on into weather that has deteriorated below VFR minimums — typically marked by reduced visibility, lowering cloud bases, or both — instead of turning back, diverting, or landing. The pilot ends up flying in instrument meteorological conditions (IMC) without the rating, currency, equipment, or clearance required to do so safely and legally.
Plain English
Carrying on with a flight by visual reference even though the weather has gotten bad enough that you can no longer really see where you are going. The pilot keeps flying instead of stopping, turning around, or landing somewhere else.
Context Anchor
Seen in discussions of operational pitfalls, weather decision-making, and accident prevention for pilots who are not on an instrument flight plan.
Derivation
VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules: rules for flying by outside visual reference and staying clear of clouds. “Instrument conditions” means conditions where the pilot must rely on cockpit instruments instead of outside visual cues to keep the aircraft controlled and on course.
Why Pilots Care
This decision is a leading cause of fatal loss-of-control accidents for pilots without instrument training or equipment.
Grounding Statement
Picture a pilot flying toward lowering clouds until the horizon fades and the outside view no longer gives a reliable sense of aircraft attitude or direction.
Intuition Check
The danger is not simply being near bad weather. The danger is continuing after outside visual cues are no longer good enough to fly safely under VFR.
Example Sentence 1
The accident report concluded the pilot had continued VFR into instrument conditions after the ceiling dropped below 1,000 feet along the route.
Example Sentence 2
Recognizing deteriorating visibility early prevents the dangerous mistake of continuing VFR into instrument conditions.