Definition
An operational pitfall in which a pilot, on an instrument approach, descends below the published Decision Altitude (DA) or Minimum Descent Altitude (MDA) in an attempt to get under the cloud base or low visibility and visually acquire the runway. It often occurs when the pilot has the runway environment partially in sight but feels pressure to continue rather than execute a missed approach.
Plain English
Sneaking lower than you're supposed to on an approach, hoping to slip under the clouds and spot the runway, instead of going around like the rules require.
Context Anchor
Seen in flight training, instrument approach discussions, and aeronautical decision-making lessons about unsafe shortcuts.
Derivation
From the everyday phrase 'duck under,' meaning to dip your head down to pass beneath something. The pilot is figuratively ducking below the legal minimum altitude to peek under the cloud layer.
Why Pilots Care
This practice reduces terrain clearance and has contributed to controlled-flight-into-terrain accidents, especially in low-visibility conditions.
Analogy
It is like stepping past a safety line at the edge of a platform because you think you can see better from there. The better view is not worth crossing the line that was there to protect you.
Grounding Statement
If the published altitude says to stay at or above a certain height, Duck-Under Syndrome is the temptation to go lower before the flight conditions allow it.
Intuition Check
Duck-Under Syndrome is not about a small, harmless dip in altitude. It means going below a safety limit before the pilot has the required conditions to continue.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor warned the student that duck-under syndrome had killed more pilots than almost any other approach error, and reinforced a hard commitment to go missed at minimums.
Example Sentence 2
Instructors emphasize that duck-under syndrome often occurs on non-precision approaches when visibility is marginal.