Definition
Extended range operations (ER-OPS), formerly known as ETOPS, are flights conducted by twin-engine airplanes over routes that contain a point farther from an adequate airport than the distance the airplane could fly in still air with one engine inoperative within a specified time threshold (commonly 60, 120, 180, or more minutes). Operators must be specifically authorized by the FAA and meet additional requirements covering aircraft systems, maintenance, dispatch, crew training, and route planning before conducting these flights.
Plain English
Rules and approvals that allow a two-engine airplane to fly long routes that take it far from any usable airport — like across an ocean or a remote area — even though it only has two engines. The airline has to prove the airplane and its operation are reliable enough to handle losing one engine while still hours away from a place to land.
Context Anchor
Seen in off-airway, oceanic, and remote-route planning, especially when a flight path crosses areas with few suitable airports.
Derivation
Built from plain English: 'extended' (stretched out, longer) and 'range' (the distance an aircraft can fly). Together it signals operations beyond the normal short distances from an alternate airport. The earlier name ETOPS — Extended-range Twin-engine Operational Performance Standards — was rebranded to ER-OPS to reflect that the same concerns can apply to aircraft with more than two engines on long, remote routes.
Why Pilots Care
It ensures the aircraft and crew are properly prepared for areas with few emergency landing options, meeting regulatory standards for safety.
Intuition Check
Do not read “extended range” as simply “a long flight.” In this context, it specifically means a flight planned around being far from a suitable place to land.
Example Sentence 1
Before launching the transatlantic leg, the dispatcher confirmed the flight met all ER-OPS requirements, including the availability of the planned en route alternate airports.
Example Sentence 2
ER-OPS rules required the aircraft to carry additional communication and navigation equipment for the remote route.