Definition
A regulatory action issued by the FAA, usually through a Notice to Air Missions (NOTAM), that temporarily restricts or prohibits aircraft operations within a defined area for reasons of safety, security, or to protect persons and property on the surface. Common triggers include wildfires, natural disasters, major sporting events, presidential or VIP movement, and hazardous incidents on the ground.
Plain English
A short-term no-fly or limited-fly zone that the FAA puts in place around a specific area for a specific reason. While it is active, pilots either cannot fly through that airspace at all or must meet special conditions to do so.
Context Anchor
Pilots encounter TFRs during preflight planning, weather briefings, flight planning apps, and FAA notices before and during a flight.
Derivation
From Latin temporarius, meaning 'lasting only for a time.' The word signals the key feature of a TFR: it is not permanent. It appears, applies for a defined window, and then goes away.
Why Pilots Care
Violating a TFR can result in FAA enforcement action, certificate suspension, or immediate safety hazards from other restricted traffic such as military or firefighting aircraft.
Analogy
A TFR is like a temporary road closure, but in the air. The area is not permanently closed, but while the restriction is active you must avoid it or follow the stated rules for entry.
Intuition Check
Do not assume “temporary” means informal or optional. A TFR is temporary in time, but it is still an official FAA restriction while it is active.
Example Sentence 1
During preflight, the pilot found a TFR over the stadium and adjusted the route to remain well clear.
Example Sentence 2
A wildfire prompted a TFR that kept all non-essential aircraft clear of the burn area.