Definition
A regulatory action issued by the FAA that restricts aircraft operations within a defined area for a specified period of time, typically to protect persons or property on the surface, provide a safe environment for disaster relief or firefighting operations, prevent unsafe congestion near events drawing large crowds, or protect national security interests such as Presidential movements. TFRs are published through Notices to Air Missions (NOTAMs) and carry the force of regulation under 14 CFR Part 91.
Plain English
A short-term no-fly zone, or limited-fly zone, that the FAA puts in place over a specific area for a specific reason — like a wildfire, a sporting event, or the President travelling through. Pilots must check for these before every flight and stay out unless they have permission.
Context Anchor
Pilots encounter TFRs during preflight planning, especially when checking current flight information before a lesson, cross-country flight, or local practice flight.
Derivation
Temporary' (Latin tempus, time) signals that the restriction is time-limited, not permanent. 'Flight restriction' is plain English. The name itself tells you the key idea: it limits flight, but only for a while.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots must identify and avoid TFRs to prevent safety hazards and enforcement actions.
Analogy
A TFR is like a temporary road closure, but in the air. The road may normally be open, but for a period of time you must avoid it or follow special permission rules.
Intuition Check
Temporary does not mean casual or optional. A TFR may last only a short time, but while it is active it is a real, enforceable flight restriction.
Example Sentence 1
During preflight planning, the pilot discovered a TFR over the stadium and rerouted the flight to remain well clear.
Example Sentence 2
A TFR kept aircraft clear of the area affected by the wildfire.