Definition
Civilian (non-military) heliports that are approved and currently in active use for helicopter instrument flight rules operations, with at least one published IFR instrument approach procedure available to the public.
Plain English
Public, non-military helipads that are set up and actively being used for helicopter flying in cloud or low visibility, with a published instrument approach you can fly to get in.
Context Anchor
Seen in IFR heliport planning, instrument procedure design, and discussions of which heliports can be used for instrument helicopter operations.
Derivation
"Operational" comes from Latin operari, to work — meaning a heliport that is actively in service, not just planned or built. "Civil" comes from Latin civilis, relating to citizens — meaning non-military, available for public or private civilian use. Together the phrase distinguishes working civilian IFR-capable heliports from military ones, from VFR-only heliports, and from heliports that exist on paper but are not yet in active IFR use.
Why Pilots Care
These are the only heliports where instrument procedures are published and legally usable, directly affecting route planning and safety in low-visibility conditions.
Intuition Check
Do not read operational as merely meaning useful or busy; here it means in service for actual use. Do not read civil as casual or civilian-style; here it means non-military.
Example Sentence 1
Because operational civil IFR heliports are relatively few in number, the pilot checked the chart supplement carefully to confirm her destination had a published helicopter approach.
Example Sentence 2
Not every heliport qualifies as an operational civil IFR heliport, so the crew verified the facility before planning the instrument departure.