Definition
Altitudes shown on en route charts within latitude/longitude grid blocks that provide reference clearance above the highest terrain or obstruction in that block. They are published in thousands and hundreds of feet, with the value depicted in large and small numerals (for example, 12 with a smaller 3 means 12,300 feet MSL).
Plain English
These are altitude numbers printed inside each square on an en route chart that tell you how high you need to be to safely clear the tallest thing in that square — terrain or obstacle.
Context Anchor
Seen on instrument chart and navigation database information used for planning or checking altitude when flying away from published routes.
Derivation
‘Grid’ refers to the latitude/longitude squares on the chart. ‘Minimum off route’ means the lowest altitude that still keeps you safe when you are not following a published airway. So the term literally describes the lowest safe altitude in that grid square when flying off-route.
Why Pilots Care
They guarantee terrain clearance when deviating from airways for weather, direct routing, or emergencies.
Grounding Statement
If you are crossing an area off a published route, the grid minimum off route altitude gives you a conservative altitude floor for that chart area.
Intuition Check
Do not read “minimum” as the best or most efficient altitude. Here it means the lowest altitude intended to provide obstacle clearance in that grid area.
Example Sentence 1
Before flying direct across the mountains, the pilot checked the grid minimum off route altitudes on the en route chart to confirm a safe cruising level.
Example Sentence 2
Reviewing the chart showed a grid minimum off route altitude of 9,500 feet across the next several squares.