Visual Separation

Visual separation refers to two types of separation procedures used in different scenarios:

  1. Visual separation in the vicinity of aerodromes – Relevant primarily for tower controllers and, in some cases, approach controllers.

  2. Delegation of separation to pilots during climb or descent – Relevant for approach controllers.

Visual Separation in the Vicinity of Aerodromes

Radar separation (excluding wake turbulence separation and runway separation) may be reduced near an aerodrome if one of the following conditions is met:

The terms “vicinity of the aerodrome” and “adequate separation” are not explicitly defined, so controllers must use discretion, such as when avoiding a missed approach where minimum separation could be compromised.

Delegation of Separation During Climb or Descent

Under specific conditions, responsibility for separation between two aircraft may be delegated to the pilots.

Phraseology Example: Own Separation - Final
Station Phraseology
ATC "RAM123, traffic, traffic two o’clock, five miles, A320, report in sight."
Pilot "Traffic in sight, RAM123."
ATC "RAM123, number three, cleared visual approach runway 35R, in the event of missed approach, climb runway heading to
4'000ft, maintain visual separation from A320 to runway 35L."

Own separation is NOT to be used:


Revision #11
Created 28 January 2025 00:12:06 by Ali
Updated 17 March 2025 21:07:50 by Ali