Reduced Vertical Separation Minima (RVSM)
Reduced Vertical Separation Minima (RVSM)
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11.Nov.2025
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SKYbrary Aviation Safety. (November 11, 2025). Reduced Vertical Separation Minima (RVSM).
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Definition
Reduced Vertical Separation Minimum airspace means any airspace between flight level 290 and flight level 410 inclusive which has been notified, prescribed or otherwise designated by the relevant competent authority as being airspace within which a vertical separation minimum of 1,000 feet or 300 metres must be applied.
Source: UK Air Navigation Order 2016, Schedule 1
Description
A program was initiated by ICAO in 1982 involving worldwide studies to assess the feasibility of a reduction of the Vertical Separation Minima (VSM) above FL290 from 2,000 feet to 1,000 feet.
The principal benefits which the implementation of the reduced VSM were expected to provide were:
- A theoretical doubling of the airspace capacity, between FL290 and FL410; and
- The opportunity for aircraft to operate at closer to the optimum flight levels with the resulting fuel economies.
The program relies on the carriage and serviceability of specified aircraft equipment and the existence of appropriate operating procedures to ensure that the risk of loss of separation is no greater than it would be outside RVSM airspace.
Implementation
Between 1997 and 2005 RVSM was implemented in all of Europe, North Africa, Southeast Asia, North America, South America, and over the North Atlantic, South Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans.
Approval for RVSM Operations
State airworthiness authorities are responsible for verifying that an aircraft is technically capable of meeting and maintaining the stringent altimetry system performance requirements. Crews must be trained in appropriate procedures in RVSM airspace. Providing all these requirements are met, an authority will issue an RVSM Operational Approval. Operators indicate RVSM approval by filing a W in field 10 of the ICAO model flight plan. It is a violation of ICAO European regional supplementary procedures for a non-approved aircraft to file a W. The Regional Monitoring Agency (RMA) is responsible for verifying the approval status of aircraft operating in RVSM airspace and reporting violations to the appropriate state authority.
An important element of the certification process is the confirmation of the aircraft height keeping performance across the entire operational flight envelope. The flight envelope covers all combinations of speed, altitude and weight/atmospheric pressure ratio that the aircraft would expect to operate across in RVSM airspace. The assessment of the aircraft performance across the flight envelope, together with the service bulletin, continuing airworthiness instructions and the amendment to the aircraft flight manual are collectively known as the RVSM approval data package. Confirmation of the RVSM approval data package is a fundamental requirement before any RVSM operational approval is issued.
Regulatory Requirements
- An operator shall not operate an aeroplane in defined portions of airspace where, based on regional air navigation agreement, a vertical separation minimum 300 m (1000ft) applies unless approved to do so by the Authority (RVSM Approval). EASA IR-OPS SPA.RVSM.100 and SPA.RVSM.110, EU-OPS 1.241 See also EU-OPS 1.872.
- Prior to granting the RVSM approval... the State shall be satisfied that:
a) the vertical navigation performance capability of the aeroplane satisfies the (laid down requirements);
b) the operator has instituted appropriate procedures in respect of continued airworthiness (maintenance and repair) practices and programmes; and
c) the operator has instituted appropriate flight crew procedures for operation in RVSM airspace.
Note: An RVSM approval is valid globally on the understanding that any operating procedures specific to a given region will be stated in the Operations Manual or appropriate crew guidance. (ICAO Annex 6 Part I Chapter 7, Para 7.2.5.)
- An operator shall ensure that aeroplanes operated in RVSM airspace are equipped with:
- Two independent altitude measurement systems;
- An altitude alerting system;
- An automatic altitude control system; and
- A secondary surveillance radar (SSR) transponder with altitude reporting system that can be connected to the altitude measurement system in use for altitude keeping. (IR-OPS SPA.RVSM.110, EU-OPS 1.872)
Separation standards within RVSM Airspace
Within RVSMairspace (between FL290 and FL410 inclusive) the vertical separation minimum is:
- 1000ft (300m) between RVSM-approved aircraft, and
- 2000ft (600m) between non-RVSM approved state aircraft and any other aircraft operating within RVSM airspace.
- 2000ft (600m) between non-RVSM aircraft operating as general air traffic (GAT) and any other aircraft within RVSM airspace.
There is no exemption for state aircraft to operate as GAT within RVSM airspace with a 1000 ft vertical separation minimum without an RVSM approval. The absence of such approval does require a separation of 2000 ft to be observed. State aircraft which are exempted from having to meet the RVSM Minimum Aircraft System Performance Specification (MASPS) in Field 18 of the ICAO FPL, shall request special handling by filling “STS/NONRVSM”.
Formation flights are to be considered non-RVSM compliant irrespective of the RVSM status of the individual aircraft within the formation and are not permitted within RVSM airspace with a 1000 ft vertical separation minimum.
Contingency procedures when unable to maintain RVSM
- The pilots shall notify ATC of any equipment failure, weather hazards such as severe turbulence etc., which may affect the ability to maintain the cleared level or the RVSM requirements. When an aircraft operating in RVSM Airspace encounters severe turbulence due to weather or wake vortex which the pilot believes will impact the aircraft’s capability to maintain its cleared flight level, the pilot shall inform ATC. ATC is required to establish either an appropriate horizontal separation minimum, or an increased vertical separation minimum of 2000ft;
- Where a meteorological forecast is predicting severe turbulence within the RVSM Airspace, ATC shall determine whether RVSM should be suspended, and, if so, the period of time, and specific flight level(s) and/or area.
- When notified by ATC of an assigned altitude deviation of more than 300ft (90 m), the pilot shall take action to return to the cleared level as quickly as possible.
- In the event of a pilot advising that the aircraft is no longer capable of RVSM operations, it is particularly important that the first ATS unit made aware of the failure performs the necessary co-ordination with subsequent ATS units.
RVSM related phraseology
- ATC wishes to determine the RVSM status of a flight - CONFIRM RVSM APPROVED
- Pilot response in case that the flight is RVSM approved - AFFIRM RVSM
- Pilot response in case that the flight is not RVSM approved - NEGATIVE RVSM
- Pilot of State aircraft responding that the flight is not RVSM approved - NEGATIVE RVSM STATE AIRCRAFT
- ATC refuses to issue a clearance into RVSM Airspace - UNABLE CLEARANCE INTO RVSM AIRSPACE, MAINTAIN [or DESCEND TO, or CLIMB TO] FL ...
- Pilot reporting severe turbulence / weather affecting ability to maintain RVSM height keeping requirements - UNABLE RVSM DUE TURBULENCE
- Pilot reporting equipment degradation below RVSM requirements - UNABLE RVSM DUE EQUIPMENT
- ATC requesting the pilot to report when able to resume RVSM - REPORT ABLE TO RESUME RVSM
- Pilot ready to resume RVSM after equipment/weather contingency - READY TO RESUME RVSM
Further Reading
Regulatory:
- ICAO Annex 6 Part I Chapter 7 Paras 7.24 - 7.27 and Appendix 2;
- ICAO Doc 9574: Manual on Implementation of a 300 m (1 000 ft) Vertical Separation Minimum Between FL 290 and FL 410 Inclusive;
- Guidance Material on the approval of operators/aircraft for RVSM operations;
- Guidance Material on the approval of operators/aircraft for RVSM operations in the United States;
- IR-OPS SPA.RVSM.100 and SPA.RVSM.110;
- EU-OPS 1.241;
- EU-OPS 1.872;
EUROCONTROL
Categories
What Links Here (51)
- Loss of Separation
- Level Bust
- Air Operator Certificate (AOC)
- European Regional Monitoring Agency (RMA)
- North Atlantic Operations - Airspace
- North Atlantic Operations - Flight Planning
- Pre-flight Preparation
- Vision
- Visual Approach
- B738 / E135, en-route, Mato Grosso Brazil, 2006
- Vehicle / E190 / E121, Jersey Channel Islands, 2010
- Level Bust Prevention - Aircraft Technical Equipment
- Correlation
- Separation Standards
- State Aircraft and Formation Flights - Separation Minima
- Altimetry System Error
- Airbus A380 Wake Vortex Guidance
- IFR Aircraft Operations Below RVR Minima
- Operational Error in European RVSM Airspace
- Rate of climb within last 1000 ft before cleared level
- Aircraft Altimeter Failure
- ATC Clearance Error
- Automation and ATM
- Conflicts with Adjacent Sectors – Typical Causes and Contributors
- Operation without a Transponder or with a Dysfunctional Transponder
- Flight Plan Completion
- Runway Overrun After Unstabilised Approach (OGHFA SE)
- Airborne Collision Avoidance Systems (ACAS) Safety Studies
- Aircraft Without Transponder – Mitigations
- ATM Sector Management
- China Reduced Vertical Separation Minima (RVSM)
- Civil-Military Interaction in ATM
- Loss of Separation During Weather Avoidance
- Release Procedure
- Formation Flights
- Adherence to SOPs (OGHFA BN)
- ATC Operations in Weather Avoidance Scenarios
- B747/DC10, Japan Airlines, Suruga Bay Japan, 2001 (Legal Process - Air Traffic Controller)
- En-route Tracking of Aircraft
- Flight Preparation and Conducting Effective Briefings (OGHFA BN)
- Hydraulic Problems: Guidance for Flight Crews
- IR-OPS
- Runway Overrun On Landing (OGHFA SE)
- TCAS II Operations in European RVSM Airspace
- Transponder
- International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
- Instrument Landing System (ILS)
- Flight Crew Workload in Preparation for the Execution of an Approach
- Capacity Management
- How Air Traffic Control Works
- The Area Controller






