Definition
The division of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) responsible for setting and enforcing the regulations, standards, and procedures that govern the certification and operation of pilots, flight instructors, aircraft, air operators, and aviation training programs in the United States.
Plain English
The part of the FAA that writes and enforces the rules for pilots, instructors, aircraft, and flight schools. It is the office that decides what training, testing, and operating standards everyone in civil aviation must meet.
Context Anchor
You may see AFS named in FAA handbooks, training guidance, safety programs, certification material, and documents used by flight instructors.
Derivation
Flight Standards' simply names what the office does — sets the standards for flight. The 'A' in AFS comes from the FAA's internal office-coding system, where 'A' identifies the Aviation Safety organization the service belongs to. Knowing that helps explain why the abbreviation is AFS rather than FSS (which is already used for Flight Service Station).
Why Pilots Care
AFS standards determine the requirements for pilot certificates, flight school approvals, checkrides, and day-to-day operating rules that every pilot must follow.
Intuition Check
“Service” does not mean aircraft maintenance or customer service here. In this term, it means an official FAA branch with responsibility for flight standards.
Example Sentence 1
The practical test standards used on every checkride are published by the FAA's Flight Standards Service.
Example Sentence 2
Flight schools operate under oversight from the Flight Standards Service (AFS) to ensure their programs follow approved safety practices.