Definition
External pressure risks are hazards created when influences from outside the cockpit — schedules, passenger expectations, financial concerns, personal commitments, or the desire to impress others — push a pilot toward decisions they would not otherwise make. These pressures can lead to rushed preflight actions, continued flight into deteriorating conditions, or operating an aircraft when the pilot is not fit to fly.
Plain English
These are the outside-the-cockpit pressures — like being late, not wanting to disappoint people, or feeling you must finish the trip — that can push a pilot into bad decisions.
Context Anchor
Seen in FAA risk-management discussions, especially when deciding whether to start, continue, delay, or cancel a flight.
Derivation
External' comes from the Latin externus, meaning 'outward' or 'from outside.' In this context, it points to influences that originate outside the aircraft and outside the flight itself — yet still shape what happens in the cockpit.
Why Pilots Care
Unrecognized external pressures commonly contribute to continued VFR flight into IMC, fuel exhaustion, or other preventable accidents.
Grounding Statement
If the reason for pushing on is mostly outside the flight itself, such as a schedule, an expectation, or a promise, it may be an external pressure risk.
Intuition Check
External pressure does not mean only someone openly telling you what to do. It can also be quiet pressure you put on yourself because of time, money, passengers, pride, or plans.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor reminded the student that external pressure risks — like a passenger needing to be home by a certain time — must be identified before the flight, not during it.
Example Sentence 2
The instructor used the late arrival of a charter client to illustrate how external pressure risks can erode a go/no-go decision.