Definition
An operational pitfall in which a pilot, while flying an instrument route, allows the aircraft to descend below the published Minimum En Route Altitude (MEA) for that segment of airway or route. The MEA is the lowest altitude that guarantees both adequate terrain and obstacle clearance and acceptable navigation signal reception along a given route segment, and descending below it places the flight at risk of controlled flight into terrain or loss of navigation guidance.
Plain English
Going lower than the minimum altitude allowed for the airway you are flying. That altitude exists to keep you above terrain and obstacles and to keep your navigation signals usable, so dropping below it is a serious mistake.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flight planning, instrument clearances, airway charts, and discussions of operational pitfalls during en route flight.
Derivation
Descent comes from Latin words meaning “to climb down.” En route comes from French and means “on the way.” Together, the phrase points to going downward while already on the route, not during the final landing portion of the flight.
Why Pilots Care
This mistake directly increases the chance of navigation failure or controlled flight into terrain.
Grounding Statement
If the chart says the route segment must be flown at or above a certain altitude, going below it before the allowed point can put the aircraft outside the protected space.
Intuition Check
Minimum does not mean “recommended” or “close enough.” In this context, it means the lowest published altitude normally allowed for that route segment.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor used the accident report to show how a slow, unnoticed descent below the minimum en route altitude led the flight into rising terrain at night.
Example Sentence 2
During the instrument cross-country, the instructor intervened to prevent descent below the minimum en route altitude.