Definition
A block of airspace with defined vertical and lateral limits established outside Class A airspace to separate certain military training activities from IFR traffic. When an MOA is active, IFR traffic may be routed around it or cleared through it only if separation can be provided by ATC. VFR pilots are not prohibited from entering an active MOA but should exercise extreme caution.
Plain English
A chunk of airspace set aside for military training, like aerobatics, formation flying, or air combat practice. When it's switched on, military aircraft are doing things in there that civilian pilots don't expect, so you either avoid it or go in with your eyes wide open.
Context Anchor
Seen on aeronautical charts and during route planning when a flight path crosses or passes near military training airspace.
Why Pilots Care
Flying into an active MOA without checking its status can place a civilian aircraft in the path of fast-moving military jets performing maneuvers.
Intuition Check
Do not assume a MOA is the same as prohibited airspace. A MOA warns you that military training may be happening; it does not, by itself, mean all other aircraft are banned from entering.
Example Sentence 1
Before departing, the pilot called Flight Service and confirmed the Sells MOA was cold, so a direct route through it would be straightforward.
Example Sentence 2
The controller advised that the MOA was active and suggested an alternate route.