Definition
In the PAVE checklist, external pressures are the influences outside the flight itself that push a pilot to make a flight, continue a flight, or arrive at a destination when better judgment would say otherwise. Examples include get-there-itis, work or family commitments, passenger expectations, weather deadlines, and personal pride. They are the 'E' in PAVE and are considered one of the most dangerous risk factors because they distort decision-making.
Plain English
Anything outside the flight that makes you feel you have to go, or have to keep going, even when something is telling you not to.
Context Anchor
Seen in preflight and in-flight risk decisions, especially when checking whether personal plans or other people’s expectations are affecting the pilot’s judgment.
Derivation
External' comes from Latin externus meaning 'outside.' 'Pressure' comes from Latin pressura meaning 'a pressing.' Together: forces pressing on the pilot from outside the cockpit -- not from the airplane or weather, but from life circumstances and other people's expectations.
Why Pilots Care
Unchecked external pressures are a leading contributor to hazardous attitudes and decisions to continue into deteriorating conditions.
Analogy
External pressures are like someone standing beside you saying, “Hurry up,” while you are trying to make a careful safety decision. The pressure may not change the facts, but it can change how clearly you look at them.
Intuition Check
Do not read external pressures as just “stress.” In this context, it means outside wants, plans, or expectations that can push the pilot toward an unsafe go-or-continue decision.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor pointed out that booking a non-refundable hotel at the destination is a classic external pressure that can quietly influence a go/no-go decision.
Example Sentence 2
Despite external pressures from passengers eager to reach their destination, the pilot elected to wait for better visibility.