Definition
The minimum visibility and ceiling values a helicopter pilot must have at the departure point to legally and safely begin an instrument flight rules takeoff. Under 14 CFR Part 91, no specific takeoff minimums are prescribed for helicopters, but commercial operators under Parts 135 and 121 must comply with published or operations-specification minimums. Where standard helicopter IFR takeoff minimums apply, they are typically 1/2 statute mile visibility (or RVR 2400) by day and 1/2 statute mile (or RVR 2400) by night, lower than fixed-wing minimums because of the helicopter's ability to hover, maneuver slowly, and reject the takeoff vertically.
Plain English
The lowest visibility and cloud-base values that allow a helicopter to legally start an IFR takeoff. They are usually lower than the values required for an airplane because a helicopter can stop, hover, or back up if something goes wrong.
Context Anchor
Seen when reviewing instrument departure information for a helicopter flight from an airport or heliport, especially before departing in low visibility or into clouds.
Derivation
Minimum comes from the Latin minimus, meaning “smallest.” In this term, it means the smallest weather value allowed for takeoff, not a comfortable or recommended value.
Why Pilots Care
Helicopters can safely depart in lower weather conditions than airplanes because of their vertical-lift and hover capability; knowing the exact values prevents illegal or unsafe takeoffs.
Grounding Statement
Picture a helicopter lifting off when the outside view is poor: the takeoff minimum tells the crew whether the visibility is good enough to legally start that instrument departure.
Intuition Check
“Minimums” does not mean “good conditions.” It means the lowest allowed limit; safer or company-required limits may be higher.
Example Sentence 1
Before launching the air ambulance flight, the pilot confirmed the reported visibility met the helicopter IFR takeoff minimums listed in the company's operations specifications.
Example Sentence 2
Because the reported visibility met the helicopter IFR takeoff minimums, the crew elected to depart under IFR rather than wait for better weather.