Definition
Airspace within the United States in which air traffic control (ATC) service is provided to aircraft in accordance with the airspace classification. Controlled U.S. airspace is a generic term that covers Class A, Class B, Class C, Class D, and Class E airspace. The level of ATC service, pilot qualifications, equipment requirements, and weather minimums vary by class.
Plain English
Parts of the sky over the United States where air traffic controllers are providing service to aircraft. Different sections have different rules about who can fly there, what equipment is needed, and what weather is required.
Context Anchor
Seen in airspace rules, instrument procedure discussions, and NextGen equipment requirements that apply only in certain parts of U.S. airspace.
Derivation
"Controlled" here doesn't mean the airspace itself is restricted or off-limits. It means ATC is actively controlling traffic within it -- providing separation, instructions, and clearances. The opposite is uncontrolled airspace (Class G), where ATC service is generally not provided.
Why Pilots Care
Entry often requires ATC clearance or specific equipment, and pilots must follow published rules to avoid violations or traffic conflicts.
Intuition Check
Do not read controlled as meaning every airplane is being actively directed at every moment. Here, controlled means the airspace has an FAA class and a set of operating rules, with air traffic control services available as that class requires.
Example Sentence 1
Once the flight climbed above 1,200 feet AGL, it entered controlled U.S. airspace and the pilot was required to maintain VFR cloud clearances for Class E.
Example Sentence 2
In controlled U.S. airspace the controller issued a heading change to maintain separation from traffic ahead.