Definition
A preplanned instrument flight rule (IFR) air traffic control departure procedure published in graphic and textual form. SIDs provide a standardized routing from the runway to a point on the en route structure, designed to simplify clearance delivery, reduce pilot/controller workload, and ensure terrain and obstacle clearance during the climb-out phase.
Plain English
A published, named departure route that tells pilots exactly how to fly out of an airport after takeoff — what headings, altitudes, and waypoints to follow until they join their planned route.
Context Anchor
You see SIDs in instrument flight planning, on departure charts, and in an instrument clearance before takeoff.
Derivation
"Standard" because the route is published and consistent for everyone who flies it. "Instrument" because it is flown under IFR using onboard instruments and navigation aids. "Departure" because it covers only the leaving-the-airport phase, not the en route or arrival portions of the flight.
Why Pilots Care
Following the assigned SID guarantees obstacle clearance, reduces radio workload, and keeps departures predictable for both pilots and controllers.
Grounding Statement
A SID is the published path that helps an instrument flight get from the runway to the airway system in an organized way.
Intuition Check
A SID is not just a normal or preferred direction to depart. It is a specific published instrument departure procedure that must be assigned or included in the clearance before the pilot flies it.
Example Sentence 1
ATC issued the clearance: "Cleared to Denver via the ROCKIES TWO departure, then as filed."
Example Sentence 2
The pilot reviewed the SID chart during preflight to note the initial heading and altitude restrictions.