Definition
Standard operating procedures are written, pre-established methods for accomplishing routine flight tasks in a consistent, repeatable way. They specify how a crew or pilot will configure the aircraft, run checklists, communicate, and respond to normal and abnormal situations, so that the same task is performed the same way every time regardless of who is flying.
Plain English
A set agreed way of doing each task in the cockpit, written down so every pilot does it the same way every flight.
Context Anchor
Seen in risk management discussions, flight school rules, cockpit routines, and the PAVE checklist when considering whether outside pressure might tempt a pilot to skip the normal safe way of doing something.
Derivation
‘Standard’ comes from Old French estandart, meaning a fixed point or rallying flag — something everyone aligns to. ‘Operating procedure’ simply means a method for carrying out an operation. Together: an agreed, fixed method everyone aligns to when carrying out a task.
Why Pilots Care
Following SOPs reduces variability between pilots, lowers the chance of missed steps, and supports predictable crew coordination.
Intuition Check
Do not read “standard” as meaning optional or ordinary. In aviation, an SOP is the expected safe method for doing a task, not just a casual preference.
Example Sentence 1
The flight school’s SOPs require a full passenger briefing before every flight, even on repeat trips with the same passengers.
Example Sentence 2
Instructors stress that deviating from SOPs without good reason can create confusion during multi-crew operations.