Definition
A regulatory action issued by the FAA that temporarily restricts aircraft operations within a defined area of airspace, for a defined period of time, for reasons such as protecting persons or property on the surface, supporting disaster relief, securing VIP movements, or preventing congestion over events. TFRs are published via NOTAM and carry the force of regulation; entry without authorization can result in enforcement action, including certificate suspension or interception.
Plain English
A short-term no-fly or restricted-fly zone the FAA puts in place around something happening on the ground — like a wildfire, a presidential visit, a major sporting event, or a disaster site. Pilots must check for TFRs before every flight and stay out unless they have permission.
Context Anchor
Pilots check for TFRs during preflight planning and may also receive TFR information from flight service, aviation weather tools, or air traffic control.
Derivation
‘Temporary’ from Latin tempus (time), meaning ‘lasting only for a limited time.’ ‘Restriction’ from Latin restringere (to bind back, limit). Together: a flight limitation that applies only for a specific window of time — not a permanent airspace structure.
Why Pilots Care
Violating a TFR can result in enforcement action, certificate suspension, or in severe cases, interception by military aircraft.
Analogy
A TFR is like a temporary road closure in the sky. The area may normally be open, but for a limited time pilots must stay out or follow special instructions.
Intuition Check
Temporary does not mean informal or optional. A TFR may last only a short time, but while it is active it is an enforceable flight restriction.
Example Sentence 1
During preflight, she checked NOTAMs and discovered a TFR over the stadium for that afternoon's game, so she replanned her route to stay well clear.
Example Sentence 2
The flight was delayed until the TFR over the disaster area was lifted, allowing safe passage.