Definition
A defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided to aircraft. Each FIR has clearly published lateral and vertical boundaries and is the responsibility of a single controlling authority, typically a national air traffic services provider. Adjacent FIRs together cover the entire surface of the Earth, including oceanic areas, so that every flight is always within some FIR.
Plain English
It is a chunk of sky with set boundaries that one country or agency is responsible for. While you are flying inside it, that agency provides you with flight information and will start search and rescue if you go missing.
Context Anchor
Seen on enroute charts, international route planning, oceanic flying, and discussions of which facility provides services in a particular area.
Derivation
From 'flight,' 'information' (Latin informatio, 'giving form to'), and 'region' (Latin regio, 'a defined area'). The name describes the function exactly: a region of sky in which flight information is provided.
Why Pilots Care
It determines which authority supplies flight information and alerts, affecting radio frequencies, procedures, and international flight planning.
Grounding Statement
When an aircraft crosses an FIR boundary, it may also move into the area served by a different flight information authority.
Intuition Check
A Flight Information Region is not just any area with aviation information. It is an officially defined airspace area with assigned responsibility for flight information and alerting services.
Example Sentence 1
Before crossing into the next FIR, the crew contacted the new controlling authority and received a fresh clearance.
Example Sentence 2
Before departure the pilot reviewed FIR boundaries to select the correct frequencies for the route.