Definition
A specific departure route established by Air Traffic Control between certain airport pairs to organize and standardize the flow of departing IFR traffic. A PDR is a non-published route that ATC assigns when issuing a clearance, used to keep departures separated from arrivals and other traffic flows in busy airspace.
Plain English
ATC's preferred way out of an airport when you're heading to a particular destination. Instead of you picking the route, the controllers have already worked out the best path for that city pair, and that's what they'll clear you to fly.
Context Anchor
You may see PDRs during instrument departure planning or receive one in an air traffic control clearance before takeoff.
Derivation
‘Preferential’ comes from the Latin praeferre, meaning ‘to put before’ or ‘prefer.’ Here it signals that ATC prefers this particular route over others for departures between two airports because it fits cleanly into the traffic flow.
Why Pilots Care
Following the assigned PDR keeps the flight in compliance with ATC instructions and local procedures while avoiding delays or noise violations.
Intuition Check
Preferential does not mean optional or just the pilot’s personal preference. Here it means a route air traffic control prefers for traffic flow; once it is assigned in a clearance, that is the route to fly unless air traffic control changes it.
Example Sentence 1
Departing Boston for New York, the pilot received a clearance that matched the published PDR for that city pair.
Example Sentence 2
Clearance delivery included the PDR so the crew could load it into the flight management system before takeoff.