Definition
A grouping of ground-related activities that keep an aircraft airworthy and ready to fly: handling (moving, towing, parking, and tying down the aircraft), service (routine tasks such as fueling, oil checks, tire inflation, and battery care), and maintenance (inspections, repairs, and replacement of parts performed under FAA regulations). In the FAA handbook, this phrase introduces the chapter that covers what an owner or pilot must do, may do, and must have a certificated mechanic do.
Plain English
All the on-the-ground care an aircraft needs: moving it around safely, topping it up and looking after it day to day, and getting it inspected and repaired when required.
Context Anchor
Seen in the Pilot’s Handbook chapter that explains how pilots should care for an aircraft on the ground before and after flight.
Derivation
Handling comes from the idea of using the hands to manage or control something. Service originally meant work done for use or readiness. Maintenance comes from words meaning to keep or preserve. Together, the phrase points to keeping the aircraft properly managed, supplied, and preserved between flights.
Why Pilots Care
Proper handling, service, and maintenance prevent mechanical failures, ensure regulatory compliance, and directly impact flight safety and aircraft longevity.
Grounding Statement
This term is about what happens to the aircraft on the ground so it is safe and ready when the next flight begins.
Intuition Check
Do not read “handling” here as how the airplane feels in flight, and do not read “service” as customer service. In this FAA context, the phrase means ground care, supplies, inspections, and upkeep of the aircraft.
Example Sentence 1
Chapter 9 of the PHAK covers handling, service, and maintenance, so the new owner read it carefully before taking delivery of the aircraft.
Example Sentence 2
Chapter 9 covers handling, service, and maintenance topics including tie-down procedures and corrosion prevention.