Definition
The Federal Aviation Administration is the agency of the United States federal government responsible for regulating and overseeing all aspects of civil aviation within the U.S. Its responsibilities include certifying pilots, mechanics, and aircraft; establishing and enforcing the Federal Aviation Regulations; operating the air traffic control system; managing the national airspace; and setting standards for airports, flight training, and aviation safety.
Plain English
The FAA is the U.S. government body that makes the rules for flying, issues pilot and aircraft certificates, runs air traffic control, and oversees aviation safety across the country.
Context Anchor
You will see FAA in official pilot handbooks, regulations, practical test standards, medical certification, aircraft paperwork, and many training documents.
Derivation
Federal means it operates at the national level of government. Aviation comes from the Latin avis, meaning bird, and refers to the operation of aircraft. Administration here means a government agency that administers — runs and enforces — a system of rules. Together: the national agency that runs civil aviation in the United States.
Why Pilots Care
The FAA sets the legal standards pilots must meet to train, earn certificates, and operate aircraft.
Intuition Check
The FAA is not just air traffic control, and it is not just the agency that issues pilot certificates. It is the single federal authority covering both — plus aircraft certification, airports, regulations, and safety oversight.
Example Sentence 1
The student pilot received their certificate from the FAA after passing the checkride.
Example Sentence 2
The FAA publishes the Airplane Flying Handbook that outlines safe operating procedures.
Media
