Definition
An off-route altitude shown on IFR en route charts that provides obstruction clearance with a 1,000-foot buffer in non-mountainous areas and a 2,000-foot buffer in designated mountainous areas. OROCA is computed for an entire quadrangle on the chart and does not guarantee navigation signal coverage, communications coverage, or compliance with ATC routing or minimum IFR altitudes. It is intended as a reference for emergency or off-airway situations, not as an authorized IFR altitude.
Plain English
OROCA is a number printed on en route charts that tells you the lowest altitude in that area where you would clear all known terrain and obstacles by a safe margin. It is a backup reference, not a cleared altitude to fly.
Context Anchor
Seen on instrument en route charts and during preflight planning when a pilot considers flying direct or otherwise operating away from published routes.
Derivation
The name describes itself by purpose: an altitude that gives obstruction clearance when you are off the published route. It is named for what it protects you from -- terrain and obstacles -- rather than for navigation or ATC use.
Why Pilots Care
Provides a reliable minimum altitude that keeps the aircraft safely above terrain and obstacles when no published procedure or airway applies.
Grounding Statement
Picture drawing a box around part of the chart, finding the highest obstacle in that box, and adding a safety buffer above it; that is the basic idea behind this altitude.
Intuition Check
“Clearance” does not mean permission from air traffic control here. It means vertical space above terrain and obstacles. “Off-route” does not mean any altitude is acceptable. It means you need a separate obstacle-clearance reference because you are away from a protected published route.
Example Sentence 1
After losing communications and drifting off the airway, the pilot climbed to the OROCA shown in that grid box to ensure terrain clearance while sorting out the situation.
Example Sentence 2
When weather forced a deviation, the crew used the off-route obstruction clearance altitude to stay safely above terrain.