Definition
The weight of the pilot, crew, passengers, baggage, usable fuel, and any drainable oil — calculated as the difference between the airplane's maximum allowable gross weight and its empty weight. Useful load represents everything the airplane can carry beyond its own structure and permanently installed equipment.
Plain English
How much weight the airplane is allowed to carry on top of itself — people, bags, and fuel included. It's what's left over after you subtract the airplane's own weight from the maximum weight it's certified to fly at.
Context Anchor
You will see useful load in weight-and-balance planning, especially when deciding how much fuel, baggage, and passenger weight the airplane can legally and safely carry.
Derivation
"Useful" here means "available for use by the operator" — the portion of the airplane's weight capacity the pilot actually gets to fill. It's distinguished from the empty weight, which is fixed and not at the pilot's discretion.
Why Pilots Care
Determines the maximum safe payload for each flight and directly affects takeoff distance, climb performance, and overall safety margins.
Analogy
Think of useful load like the remaining carrying room in a backpack after the backpack’s own weight is counted. The backpack may be strong, but there is still a limit to how much you can safely put in it.
Intuition Check
Useful load does not mean only the items that are “useful” to the pilot. In this context, it means the airplane’s available carrying capacity for people, baggage or cargo, and usable fuel.
Example Sentence 1
With a useful load of 850 pounds, the pilot subtracted full fuel and then worked out how much weight was left for passengers and baggage.
Example Sentence 2
With four passengers and full baggage, the Cessna 172 was still well under its useful load limit.