Definition
A standard instrument departure (SID) is a published, preplanned IFR departure procedure issued by ATC that provides a structured route and altitude profile from the runway to the en route phase of flight. SIDs are depicted on charts and contain specific headings, fixes, altitudes, and climb requirements designed to expedite traffic flow, simplify clearance delivery, and ensure obstacle clearance from busy airports.
Plain English
A SID is a ready-made departure route the controller can assign you. Instead of giving you a long list of headings and altitudes after takeoff, ATC just names the SID and you fly the printed instructions on the chart.
Context Anchor
You see SIDs on instrument departure charts, in route planning, and in an instrument clearance before takeoff.
Derivation
"Standard" means the route is pre-published and the same for everyone who is assigned it. "Instrument" means it is flown under instrument flight rules using cockpit instruments rather than visual reference. "Departure" refers specifically to the climb-out phase from the runway to the en route structure. The word "standard" is the key clue: this is a fixed, repeatable procedure rather than something built on the fly.
Why Pilots Care
They reduce pilot workload, guarantee terrain clearance, and let controllers sequence departures efficiently.
Intuition Check
Do not read “standard” as “general” or “optional.” In this context, it means a specific published procedure. Do not read “instrument” as “only used in clouds.” A SID may be flown in clear weather when operating under instrument flight rules.
Example Sentence 1
Cleared for takeoff, the crew flew the published SID, climbing on runway heading to 3,000 feet before turning on course.
Example Sentence 2
ATC cleared the flight via the ABC SID for the departure.