AIM ¶ 4-4-14 — Visual Separation
AIM 4-4-14 visual separation explained: pilot responsibilities, wake turbulence, scanning technique, and when traffic is no longer a factor. Checkride prep.
Visual separation is one tool ATC uses to keep aircraft apart in terminal and en route airspace. It works one of two ways:
- The tower controller sees the aircraft and issues instructions to keep them apart.
- The pilot sees the other aircraft and, when instructed by ATC, maneuvers to avoid it.
When you accept visual separation, you're agreeing to:
- Maintain constant visual surveillance of the traffic until it's no longer a factor.
- Maneuver as needed to avoid it or maintain in-trail spacing.
- Accept responsibility for wake turbulence separation when following a heavy, or as a small behind a B757 or other large aircraft.
Traffic is no longer a factor when, on approach, the other aircraft is landing or going missed; or, on departure/en route, when it turns away or is on a diverging course. Visual separation is prohibited behind super aircraft.
If you lose sight of the traffic or can't accept the responsibility, tell ATC immediately. Remember, scanning is critical — use short, regularly spaced eye movements (no more than 10° each, at least one second per area) to detect threats. Under 14 CFR 91.113(a), you still have a regulatory duty to see and avoid.