AIM ¶ 7-6-2 — Radio Altimeter Anomaly Reporting
AIM 7-6-2 explains how pilots should recognize, respond to, and report radio/radar altimeter (RADALT) anomalies and RFI to ATC and the FAA.
The radio altimeter (RADALT) is the only sensor that directly measures your aircraft's height above terrain, and many safety systems depend on it — including TAWS, EGPWS, and TCAS. Because the receiver is highly sensitive, it's vulnerable to radio frequency interference (RFI) in the C-band, which can degrade or disable altimeter functions during the most critical phases of flight: takeoff, approach, and landing.
Interference may show up as inoperative readings, erroneous data, or unexpected behavior in dependent automation. Per AIM 7-6-2, pilots should:
- Monitor the radio altimeter and connected automation for discrepancies.
- Transition to procedures that don't require the radio altimeter when an anomaly is detected.
- Notify ATC as soon as practical (inflight report).
- File a post-flight report via the FAA's Radio Altimeter Anomaly Reporting Form, including date/time, location, heading, altitude, aircraft type, flight number, weather, RADALT make/model, event overview, and operational impact.
This is recommended FAA guidance, not a regulation, but accurate reporting helps the FAA identify and mitigate harmful RFI sources nationwide.