Definition
The structured process of identifying, assessing, and mitigating hazards before and during a flight that is being conducted for a real operational purpose, such as a training flight, a personal trip, or a commercial mission, rather than during a classroom discussion. It applies the same risk management principles taught on the ground to the live decisions a pilot must make in real time, including go/no-go calls, in-flight diversions, and adjustments to the plan as conditions change.
Plain English
Spotting what could go wrong on a real flight, working out how serious each risk is, and taking action to reduce it — both while planning and while flying.
Context Anchor
Used in flight instruction, preflight planning, and in-flight decision-making when a pilot or instructor is evaluating weather, aircraft condition, pilot readiness, route, fuel, passengers, and changing conditions.
Why Pilots Care
It directly lowers the chance of accidents by catching problems early instead of reacting after they become emergencies.
Grounding Statement
If the weather is getting worse ahead, risk management is the act of noticing it early, deciding what it could mean for the flight, and taking a safer action before options disappear.
Intuition Check
Risk management does not mean removing all risk; flying always has some risk. It means recognizing the risk that is present and making practical choices to reduce it to an acceptable level.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor walked the student through risk management during operational flights by reviewing weather, fatigue, and aircraft condition before each leg of the cross-country.
Example Sentence 2
Mid-flight the pilot applied risk management by diverting to an alternate airport when unexpected weather began to exceed comfort limits.