Definition
The required rate of descent, expressed in feet per nautical mile or as a percentage, that an aircraft must achieve at the start of a published departure or missed approach procedure to ensure adequate obstacle clearance. On a Standard Instrument Departure (SID) or Obstacle Departure Procedure (ODP), the initial descent gradient applies to the first segment after the missed approach point or transition fix where descent begins, and it must be flown until reaching the next altitude constraint or fix.
Plain English
How steeply the aircraft must come down at the very beginning of a descent segment on a published procedure. It is the minimum sink rate the procedure designer assumed, and flying shallower than this can put the aircraft too high or too close to terrain or other constraints further along the route.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument procedure and altitude discussions when planning whether a descent can be made safely and smoothly from one part of a procedure to the next.
Derivation
"Initial" means the first part of something. "Gradient" comes from Latin gradus, meaning a step or degree of slope. Together the term simply names the slope of the first descent step in a procedure, distinguishing it from gradients required later in the same procedure.
Why Pilots Care
It tells the pilot the exact descent rate needed to meet altitude restrictions and remain safe.
Grounding Statement
Picture leaving one assigned altitude and needing to lose a set amount of height before reaching the next point on the procedure.
Intuition Check
Do not read “gradient” as a color change or a vague steepness. Here it means a measured descent slope: altitude lost over ground distance.
Example Sentence 1
The chart showed an initial descent gradient of 400 feet per nautical mile, so the crew set up a higher rate of descent immediately after crossing the fix.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot adjusted power to meet the initial descent gradient shown on the approach plate.