Definition
An aeronautical chart designed for instrument flight at and above 18,000 feet MSL, depicting the jet route structure, high-altitude airways, navigation aids, intersections, reporting points, and air traffic control boundaries used in that airspace.
Plain English
A navigation chart pilots use when flying on instruments at high altitudes. It shows the routes, navaids, and ATC boundaries needed to fly safely in that part of the sky.
Context Anchor
Seen during IFR flight planning and in flight when a route will be flown at or above 18,000 feet.
Derivation
En route' comes from French, meaning 'on the way.' The chart is named for what it does: it guides the pilot while on the way at high altitude under instrument flight rules.
Why Pilots Care
Provides the correct routing and altitude information needed for safe, efficient flight in the jet-route environment where low-altitude charts do not apply.
Analogy
It is like using a highway map instead of a local street map: it is built for the faster, higher-level route structure, not for every low-level detail.
Intuition Check
Do not read “high altitude” as simply “pretty high.” For this chart, it generally means the IFR chart used for routes at 18,000 feet mean sea level and above. Also, IFR does not mean “bad weather only”; it means the flight is being conducted under instrument flight rules.
Example Sentence 1
Before departing on the cross-country, the pilot pulled out the IFR En Route High Altitude Chart to review the jet routes between the two airports.
Example Sentence 2
During the flight, she referenced the IFR En Route High Altitude Chart to identify the next navigation fix along the assigned route.