Definition
Restricted airspace whose using agency (typically the military) has agreed that, when the airspace is not needed for its restricted activity, the controlling ATC facility may release it for use by non-participating aircraft. When released, IFR and VFR traffic may be cleared through it; when active, access is denied or tightly controlled.
Plain English
A piece of restricted airspace that is shared. When the military isn't using it, air traffic control can let other aircraft fly through. When the military is using it, no one else gets in.
Context Anchor
Seen when reading about special use airspace, flight planning, and air traffic control clearances near restricted areas.
Derivation
Joint-use' simply means shared between two parties — here, the military (or other using agency) and civil aviation through ATC. The 'joint' part is what distinguishes it from non-joint-use restricted areas, which are never released to other traffic.
Why Pilots Care
Allows more direct routing and reduces unnecessary detours when the airspace is inactive.
Intuition Check
Do not read “joint-use” as meaning any pilot may use it whenever they want. It means the restricted area can shift between special activity use and normal air traffic control use, depending on whether it has been released.
Example Sentence 1
The controller advised that the restricted area was cold and cleared us direct through it, saving about fifteen minutes.
Example Sentence 2
Joint-use restricted airspace near the range let the flight take a shorter path during non-operational hours.