Definition
A specialized agency of the United Nations that develops and publishes international Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs) for civil aviation, covering areas such as airspace, air traffic control, navigation, communications, airworthiness, and pilot licensing. Member states use these standards as the basis for their own national aviation regulations.
Plain English
ICAO is the international body that sets the common rules and standards countries follow so that civil aviation works safely and consistently across borders.
Context Anchor
Seen in FAA handbooks, international flight planning, charting, airspace, and procedure discussions where U.S. aviation practices connect with worldwide aviation standards.
Derivation
From Latin civilis (relating to citizens, i.e., non-military) and aviation (from Latin avis, bird). 'Civil aviation' means non-military flying, which is what ICAO governs.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots flying across borders rely on ICAO standards to ensure their aircraft, procedures, and documentation are accepted in foreign airspace.
Intuition Check
ICAO does not directly control your individual flight like air traffic control does. It sets international aviation standards that countries use when making their own rules and procedures.
Example Sentence 1
Standard radio phraseology used worldwide is based on ICAO recommendations so pilots and controllers from different countries can understand each other.
Example Sentence 2
ICAO rules require specific phraseology on international radio frequencies.