Definition
A landing technique used when the runway surface is soft, rough, or uneven — such as grass, dirt, sand, mud, or snow — in which the pilot flies a normal approach but touches down at the slowest possible speed in a nose-high attitude, with as little weight on the wheels as possible, then keeps the nosewheel off the surface during rollout to prevent it from digging in or causing the airplane to nose over.
Plain English
It is the way you land on a runway that is not firm — like grass or mud — so the wheels do not sink in or get caught. You touch down very gently, hold the nose up, and let the airplane settle slowly as you slow down.
Context Anchor
Used in training and in real operations when landing on grass, dirt, sand, snow, wet turf, or any runway surface that may not support the airplane as firmly as pavement.
Derivation
‘Soft-field’ refers to the surface itself — soft as in yielding, not firm. The technique gets its name from the kind of runway it is designed for, in contrast to a hard-surfaced (paved) runway.
Why Pilots Care
Prevents the nosewheel from digging into soft surfaces, reducing risk of damage or nose-over.
Intuition Check
“Soft-field” does not mean an easy or relaxed landing. It means the surface may be soft enough that the wheels can sink in, so the pilot must land gently and keep the nose wheel light.
Example Sentence 1
Before landing on the grass strip, the student briefed a soft-field approach and landing, planning to hold the nose off during rollout.
Example Sentence 2
During the soft-field approach and landing, power was added to keep the weight off the main landing gear until the aircraft slowed down.