Definition
A specialized agency of the United Nations that establishes international standards and recommended practices for civil aviation, including rules of the air, air traffic services, communications, navigation, airworthiness, and personnel licensing. Member states agree to apply these standards, or to file differences when their national rules vary.
Plain English
ICAO is the worldwide body that sets the common rules countries follow so that flying between them works safely and consistently. It does not run flights or control airspace itself — it writes the shared rulebook.
Context Anchor
Pilots may see ICAO in the Pilot/Controller Glossary, international flight planning, airport identifiers, aircraft documents, and references to worldwide aviation standards.
Derivation
Founded in 1944 under the Chicago Convention. 'Civil' here means non-military aviation — passenger, cargo, and general aviation flying — as distinct from military operations.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots flying internationally must follow ICAO standards to ensure compatibility with foreign airspace rules and procedures.
Intuition Check
ICAO is not the same as the FAA. ICAO sets worldwide aviation standards and recommendations; each country’s aviation authority applies and enforces rules within that country.
Example Sentence 1
Because the flight was crossing into Canadian airspace, the crew filed an ICAO flight plan rather than a domestic one.
Example Sentence 2
Many U.S. procedures align with ICAO recommendations to support seamless international operations.