Definition
The set of performance changes that occur as an aircraft's gross weight increases or decreases. As weight rises, the aircraft requires a higher angle of attack and more lift to stay airborne, which produces more induced drag and reduces excess thrust available for climb and acceleration. The practical results include longer takeoff and landing distances, slower climb rates, lower service ceilings, reduced cruise speed, shorter range, and higher stall speeds.
Plain English
How a heavier airplane flies compared to a lighter one. The heavier it is, the longer it takes to get off the ground, the slower it climbs, the lower it can fly, and the faster it has to be moving before the wing will hold it up.
Context Anchor
Seen when planning weight and balance, using takeoff and landing performance charts, checking climb ability, and deciding whether the airplane can safely depart with the people, baggage, and fuel on board.
Why Pilots Care
Excess weight reduces safety margins, increases fuel consumption, and can make the aircraft unable to meet required performance standards.
Analogy
A lightly loaded car accelerates and climbs a hill more easily than the same car packed with people and luggage. An airplane reacts the same basic way: more weight means the aircraft must work harder to do the same job.
Grounding Statement
Picture the same airplane departing on a cool morning: with only one person and half fuel it climbs strongly, but with full seats, baggage, and full fuel it uses more runway and climbs more slowly.
Intuition Check
Do not think of weight as only a paperwork number for loading the airplane. In flight performance, weight directly changes how much runway, speed, climb ability, and stopping distance the aircraft needs.
Example Sentence 1
After loading four passengers and full fuel, the pilot recalculated takeoff distance because the effect of weight on flight performance meant the runway margin was much smaller than on a solo flight.
Example Sentence 2
Understanding the effect of weight on flight performance helps pilots decide whether to offload baggage for a high-density altitude departure.