Missed Approach
Missed Approach
Description
When, for any reason, it is judged that an approach or landing cannot be continued to a successful landing, a missed approach or go-around shall be flown.
Reasons for discontinuing an approach or landing may include the following:
- The required visual references have not been established by the Decision Altitude/Height (DA/DH) or Minimum Descent Altitude/Height (MDA/MDH) or is acquired but is subsequently lost;
- The approach or landing is, or has become unstabilised;
- The aircraft is not positioned so as to allow a controlled touchdown within the designated runway touchdown zone with a consequent risk of aircraft damage with or without a Runway Excursion if the attempt is continued;
- The runway is obstructed;
- Landing clearance has not been received or is issued and later cancelled;
- A go-around is being flown for training purposes with ATC approval.
Missed Approach Procedure
A missed approach procedure is the procedure to be followed if an approach cannot be continued. It specifies a point where the missed approach begins, and a point or an altitude/height where it ends. (ICAO Doc 8168: PANS-OPS)
A missed approach procedure is specified for all airfield and runway Precision Approach and Non-Precision Approach procedures. The missed approach procedure takes into account deconfliction from ground obstacles and from other air traffic flying instrument procedures in the airfield vicinity. Only one primary missed approach procedure is established for each instrument approach procedure. However, alternate missed approach procedures may also be published. Alternate procedures are normally used when the navigation aid on which the primary approach is predicated becomes inoperative.
Usually a go-around from an instrument approach should follow the specified missed approach procedure unless otherwise instructed by air traffic control or if safety reasons dictate otherwise.
If a missed approach is initiated below the DA/H in precision approach procedures, or beyond the missed approach point (MAPt) or below MDA/H in non-precision approach procedures pilots must consider if they can still safely follow the published missed approach or if they require a special routing e.g. in case of an engine failure during go-around (e.g. by birdstrike) when, depending on aircraft performance, it may be necessary to follow special engine failure turn procedures or using visual references only.
If a missed approach is initiated before arriving at the missed approach point (MAPt), it is important that pilots proceed to the MAPt (or to the middle marker fix or specified DME distance for precision approach procedures) and then follow the missed approach procedure in order to remain within the protected airspace. The MAPt may be overflown at an altitude/height greater than that required by the procedure; but in the case of a missed approach with a turn, the turn must not take place before the MAPt, unless otherwise specified in the procedure.
The MAPt in a procedure is defined by:
- the point of intersection of an electronic glide path with the applicable DA/H in precision approaches; or,
- a navigation facility, a fix, or a specified distance from the final approach fix in non-precision approaches.
A visual go around may be made after an unsuccessful visual approach if no published missed approach is available.
A go-around is often unexpected and places special demands on the pilots, who may not often have an opportunity to practice this procedure other then in the simulator. Some aspects of the go-around which deserve special study are:
- Flying a manual go-around;
- Go-around from low airspeed and/or low thrust;
- The transition to instrument flying;
- Monitoring and Crew coordination during go-around initiation;
- Awareness of initial level-off altitude vs pitch attitude and thrust setting;
- Awareness of remaining fuel and options available.
Often, if an emergency or abnormal situation develops during the final stages of an approach, it is likely that the approach will be continued to land. However, in some cases, such as a configuration issue (flaps or gear position), performing a missed approach, completing the appropriate drills and checklists to prepare for a non-standard approach and then conducting a second approach to a landing or diverting to a more suitable airfield might be the more prudent course of action.
Accidents and Incidents
The following events occurred during missed approach or involved a missed approach:
none on SKYbrary
Further Reading
- ICAO Annex 6 (Aircraft Operations)
- ICAO Doc 8168 (PANS-OPS)
- IR-OPS CAT.OP.MPA.110 & 120 & CAT.POL.A.245
- IR-OPS AMC3&4 CAT.OP.MPA.110 Aerodrome operating minima
- EU-OPS
- FAA Information for Operators 17009: Committed-to-Stop Point on Landings, July 2017
EUROCONTROL, European Regions Airline Association, and Flight Safety Foundation
Flight Safety Foundation
- ALAR Briefing Note 6.1 — Being Prepared to Go Around
- ALAR Briefing Note 6.2 — Manual Go-around
- ALAR Briefing Note 6.4 — Bounce Recovery — Rejected Landing
- Go-Around Decision-Making and Execution Project, Tzvetomir Blajev, Capt William Curtis (Flight Safety Foundation), March 2017
The Flight Safety Foundation ALAR Toolkit provides useful training information and guides to best practice. Copies of the FSF ALAR Toolkit may be ordered from the Flight Safety Foundation ALAR website.
Flight Data Services Case Studies
Go-Around Safety Forum
- Go-Around Safety Forum (GASF), Brussels 2013: Findings and Conclusions
- "Do you really understand how your trim works?" - Captain Alex Fisher
Airbus Descent Management Briefing Notes
EASA
What Links Here (220)
- Aerodrome Operating Minima (AOM)
- Baulked Landing: Guidance for Flight Crew
- Circling Approach
- Decision Altitude/Height (DA/DH)
- Fuel - Flight Planning Definitions
- Holding Pattern
- Instrument Approach Procedure (IAP)
- Localiser (LOC) and Localiser Type Directional Aid (LDA) Approaches
- Minimum Descent Altitude/Height (MDA/MDH)
- Pilot Induced Oscillation
- Precision Approach
- Side-step Manoeuvre
- B734, Brisbane Australia, 2001
- B744 / A321, vicinity London Heathrow UK, 2000
- B744 / A306, vicinity London Heathrow UK, 1996
- B737 / B737, vicinity Geneva Switzerland, 2006
- A332 / RJ1H, vicinity Zurich Switzerland, 2004
- MD83, vicinity Nantes France, 2004
- B752, vicinity Gardermoen Oslo Norway, 2002
- DC93, vicinity Port Harcourt Nigeria, 2005
- B763 / B763, Kansai Japan, 2007
- CRJ2, en-route, Fort St. John BC Canada, 2006
- E170, Cleveland OH USA, 2007
- B752, vicinity London Gatwick UK, 2008
- A333, vicinity Wom Guam Airport, Guam, 2002
- CRJ1, vicinity Brest France, 2003
- MD83, vicinity Dublin Airport, Ireland, 2007
- B722, Hamilton OT Canada 2008
- B733, vicinity Bournemouth UK, 2007
- A320, vicinity Sochi Russia, 2006
- A320, vicinity Melbourne Australia, 2007
- B752, Puerto Plata Dominican Republic, 1998
- MD83, vicinity Paris Orly France, 1997
- A320 / B738, vicinity Launceston Australia, 2008
- DH8C, vicinity Sydney Australia, 2008
- DC95 / C206, Toronto Canada, 2002
- A320, Varadero Cuba, 2010
- B738 / A319, Dublin Ireland, 2010
- A321, vicinity Singapore, 2010
- A318/B739, vicinity Amsterdam Netherlands, 2007
- B712, vicinity Kalgoorlie Western Australia, 2010
- CRJ1, Kinshasa Democratic Republic of Congo, 2011
- AT72, vicinity Pakse Laos, 2013
- E55P, St Gallen-Altenrhein Switzerland, 2012
- B77L, Copenhagen Denmark, 2011
- Vehicle / B712, Perth Western Australia, 2014
- CRJ2 / A320, vicinity Port Elizabeth South Africa, 2014
- AT75, vicinity Cork Ireland, 2014
- A320, vicinity Lyons Saint-Exupéry France, 2012
- B733 / DH8D, Fort McMurray Canada, 2014
- DH8D / B737, Winnipeg Canada, 2014
- A320/B738, vicinity Delhi India, 2013
- B738, vicinity Eindhoven Netherlands, 2013
- SW4, Sanikiluaq Nunavut Canada, 2012
- B773, Dubai UAE, 2016
- A320 / CRJ2, Port Elizabeth South Africa, 2014
- B735, vicinity Kazan Russia, 2013
- B738, vicinity Porto Portugal, 2015
- A320 / F50, Adelaide Australia, 2016
- A319 / A320, Naha Okinawa Japan, 2012
- DH8B / BN2P, Horn Island QLD Australia, 2016
- E195 / A320, Brussels Belgium, 2016
- E190 / A320, Toronto ON Canada, 2016
- BN2P / B763, vicinity Kagoshima Japan, 2015
- A319, Mumbai India, 2013
- A321, Fuerteventura Spain, 2016
- DH8C, vicinity Adelaide Australia, 2015
- B733, vicinity Kosrae Micronesia, 2015
- A333 / A333, Narita International Japan, 2017
- B773 / B738 / B738, Melbourne Australia, 2015
- B738, Sint Maarten Eastern Caribbean, 2017
- B738, Rome Ciampino Italy, 2008
- A320 / B738, vicinity Delhi India, 2016
- A320, Brasilia Brazil, 2015
- A319, Rio de Janeiro Galeão Brazil, 2017
- A321, vicinity Deauville France, 2013
- SB20, vicinity Billund Denmark, 2015
- B772, Dhaka Bangladesh, 2018
- B789 / B773, Delhi India, 2017
- A320 / SF34, vicinity London Stansted UK, 2019
- B38M, Helsinki Finland, 2019
- A320 (2) / CRJX (2) / B738 (3) / A332, vicinity Madrid Barajas Spain, 2018
- A306, East Midlands UK, 2011
- MA60, vicinity Kaimana West Papua Indonesia, 2011
- B738/B738, vicinity Queenstown New Zealand, 2010
- CRJ2/ATP, Stockholm Sweden, 2011
- MD82, Phuket Thailand, 2007
- A388/A320, vicinity Frankfurt Germany, 2011
- D328, Norwich UK, 2012
- B763/DH8D, Fukuoka Japan, 2010
- A319, Luton UK, 2012
- B738, vicinity Memmingen Germany, 2012
- A332, vicinity Tripoli Libya, 2010
- A320/B734, vicinity London Gatwick UK, 2012
- SF34/SF34, vicinity Stornoway UK, 2011
- E145/E135, Chicago O’Hare USA, 2011
- B734, vicinity Lyon France, 2010
- B773, vicinity Melbourne Australia, 2011
- A320, vicinity Oslo Norway, 2008
- SF34/AT72, Helsinki Finland, 2011
- A320 / B738 Barcelona Spain, 2012
- Vehicle / E190 / E121, Jersey Channel Islands, 2010
- A343, vicinity Paris CDG France, 2012
- SW4, Cork Ireland, 2011
- B738/B738, vicinity Oslo Norway, 2012
- A320/E190/B712, vicinity Helsinki Finland, 2013
- Vehicle / UNKN, Singapore Changi, 2013
- B738, Perth Australia, 2008
- H25B, vicinity Owatonna MN USA, 2008
- Radio Discipline
- CFIT Precursors and Defences
- Response to a "PULL UP" Warning
- Visual References
- Aerodynamic Stall Awareness and Avoidance
- Go-around - Transition to Instrument Flying
- Go-around from Low Airspeed/Low Thrust
- Tail Strike
- ATC Unit Coordination
- Low Level Go-around - ATC Risk Management
- Runway Excursions Research - ATSB
- Airborne Wind Shear Warning Systems
- Flight in Mountainous Terrain
- Unstabilised Approach: Inappropriate ATC Speed Instructions
- Flying a Visual Approach
- Beyond the Runway End Safety Area
- Runway Overrun Prevention System (ROPS)
- Landing on Contaminated Runways
- Rejected Landings
- Landing Flare
- Land and Hold Short Operations
- Cross Wind Landings
- Descent below Glide-Path
- Missed Approach RTF Communications
- Engine Failure in Cruise
- Electrical Problems: Guidance for Controllers
- Cross-Checking Process
- Pilot Workload
- Pilot Handling Skills
- Thrust Reversers: Flight Crew Guidance
- Parallel Runway Operation
- Bird Strike on Final Approach: Guidance for Flight Crews
- Go-around Decision Making
- Go-around Training
- ATCO Actions during Prolonged Loss of Communication
- Continuous Descent Final Approach (CDFA)
- Flight Safety Foundation ALAR Toolkit
- Terrain Avoidance and Warning System (TAWS)
- Flying a Manual Go-around
- Go-Around
- Runway Overrun After Unstabilised Approach (OGHFA SE)
- Required Navigation Performance (RNP)
- Simultaneous Approaches to Parallel Runways
- Engine/APU on Fire: Guidance for Controllers
- ATC Operations in Weather Avoidance Scenarios
- Autopilot
- Bomb Warning: Guidance for Controllers
- CFIT After Aborted VOR-DME Approach (OGHFA SE)
- Disorientation During Vectored Go-Around (OGHFA SE)
- Distance Measuring Equipment (DME)
- Engine Failure: Guidance for Controllers
- ETOPS Diversion at Night (OGHFA SE)
- Flight Operations Risk Assessment Checklist - New Destination
- Flight Preparation and Conducting Effective Briefings (OGHFA BN)
- Food Poisoning (OGHFA SE)
- Fuel Starvation, Stress, Fatigue and Nonstandard Phraseology (OGHFA SE)
- Helicopter Performance Based Navigation
- Hydraulic Problems: Guidance for Flight Crews
- Impaired Judgment, Decision Making and Flying Skills due to Fatigue (OGHFA SE)
- Landing Gear Failure (OGHFA SE)
- Landing without Clearance – Precursors and Defences
- Low Level Wind Shear
- Microburst
- Non-stabilized Approach After ATC-Requested Runway Change (OGHFA SE)
- Pilot Memory Aids
- Press-on-itis (OGHFA BN)
- Press-on-itis and Inadequate Use of Automation (OGHFA SE)
- Runway Overrun On Landing (OGHFA SE)
- Short Vectoring and Glideslope Interception from Above: Guidance for Controllers
- Short Vectoring and Glideslope Interception from Above: Guidance for Flight Crew
- Spatial Disorientation (OGHFA SE)
- Standard Calls (OGHFA BN)
- Tailwind Operations
- Take-off / Go-around (TO/GA) Mode
- Threat and Error Management Preventing CFIT (OGHFA SE)
- Transition to Visual Flight at Night (OGHFA SE)
- Waterspout
- Wind Shear Encounter During Go-Around (OGHFA SE)
- Wrong-Surface Events
- Unstabilised Approach: Inappropriate ATC Speed Instructions
- Unstabilised Approach: Late Runway or Approach Type Change
- Unstabilised Approach: Vectoring Resulting in Intercepting the Glidepath from Above
- Unstabilised Approach: Vectoring to Runways with Significant Tailwind Component
- Go-Around Safety
- Take-off and Climb
- Cruise
- Descend, Approach and Landing
- Instrument Landing System (ILS)
- Runway Excursion (OGHFA SE)
- Preventing Landing without Clearance – Guidance for Controllers
- Global Fatal Accident Review 2002-2011
- Localiser Performance with Vertical Guidance (LPV)
- Stabilised Approach
- Flight Crew Workload in Preparation for the Execution of an Approach
- Aerodrome Traffic Circuit
- Hard Landing
- CRJ2 / Vehicles, Montréal Canada, 2019
- A321, Charlotte NC USA, 2015
- B738, vicinity Bristol UK, 2019
- A388, vicinity Moscow Domodedovo Russia, 2017
- A320, vicinity Jaipur India, 2016
- MD83 / AT76, Isfahan Iran, 2018
- MD82, Tarbes France, 2018
- A320, vicinity Birmingham UK, 2019
- B735, vicinity Madrid Barajas Spain, 2019
- B737 / B738, vicinity Amsterdam Netherlands, 2018
- B738, vicinity Bergerac France, 2015
- AT76, vicinity Dublin Ireland, 2016
- B712 / CRJ7, vicinity Strasbourg France, 2019
- AN26, vicinity Birmingham UK, 2020
- Tailwind






