METAR
METAR is a format for reporting weather information. A METAR weather report is predominantly used by aircraft pilots, and by meteorologists, who use aggregated METAR information to assist in weather forecasting.
Raw METAR is the most common format in the world for the transmission of observational weather data. It is highly standardized through the International Civil Aviation Organization, which allows it to be understood throughout most of the world.
Naming
The United States Federal Aviation Administration lays down the definition in its publication the Aeronautical Information Manual as aviation routine weather report while the international authority for the code form, the World Meteorological Organization, holds the definition to be aerodrome routine meteorological report. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the United Kingdom's Met Office both employ the definition used by the FAA. METAR is also known as Meteorological Terminal Aviation Routine Weather Report or Meteorological Aerodrome Report.Origin
METARs typically come from airports or permanent weather observation stations. Reports are generated once an hour or half-hour, but if conditions change significantly, a report known as a special may be issued. Some METARs are encoded by automated airport weather stations located at airports, military bases, and other sites. Some locations still use augmented observations, which are recorded by digital sensors, encoded via software, and then reviewed by certified weather observers or forecasters prior to being transmitted. Observations may also be taken by trained observers or forecasters who manually observe and encode their observations prior to transmission.History
The METAR format was introduced 1 January 1968 internationally and has been modified a number of times since. North American countries continued to use a Surface Aviation Observation for current weather conditions until 1 June 1996, when this report was replaced with an approved variant of the METAR agreed upon in a 1989 Geneva agreement. The WMO's publication No. 782 "Aerodrome Reports and Forecasts" contains the base METAR code as adopted by the WMO member countries.Information contained in a METAR
A typical METAR contains data for the temperature, dew point, wind direction and speed, precipitation, cloud cover and heights, visibility, and barometric pressure. A METAR may also contain information on precipitation amounts, lightning, and other information that would be of interest to pilots or meteorologists such as a pilot report or PIREP, colour states and runway visual range.In addition, a short period forecast called a TREND may be added at the end of the METAR covering likely changes in weather conditions in the two hours following the observation. These are in the same format as a Terminal Aerodrome Forecast.
The complement to METARs, reporting forecast weather rather than current weather, are TAFs. METARs and TAFs are used in VOLMET broadcasts.
Regulation
METAR code is regulated by the World Meteorological Organization in consort with the International Civil Aviation Organization. In the United States, the code is given authority under the Federal Meteorological Handbook No. 1, which paved the way for the U.S. Air Force Manual 15-111 on Surface Weather Observations, being the authoritative document for the U.S. Armed Forces. A very similar code form to the METAR is the SPECI. Both codes are defined at the technical regulation level in WMO Technical Regulation No. 49, Vol II, which is copied over to the WMO Manual No. 306 and to ICAO Annex III.METAR conventions
Although the general format of METARs is a global standard, the specific fields used within that format vary somewhat between general international usage and usage within North America. Note that there may be minor differences between countries using the international codes as there are between those using the North American conventions. The two examples which follow illustrate the primary differences between the two METAR variations.Example METAR codes
International METAR codes
The following is an example METAR from Burgas Airport in Burgas, Bulgaria. It was taken on 4 February 2005 at 16:00 Coordinated Universal Time.METAR LBBG 041600Z 12012MPS 090V150 1400 R04/P1500N R22/P1500U +SN BKN022 OVC050 M04/M07 Q1020 NOSIG 8849//91=
- METAR indicates that the following is a standard hourly observation.
- LBBG is the ICAO airport code for Burgas Airport.
- 041600Z indicates the time of the observation. It is the day of the month followed by the time of day.
- 12012MPS indicates the wind direction is from 120° at a speed of 12 m/s. Speed measurements can be in knots or meters per second.
- 090V150 indicates the wind direction is varying from 90° true to 150° true.
- 1400 indicates the prevailing visibility is.
- R04/P1500N indicates the Runway Visual Range along runway 04 is and not changing significantly.
- R22/P1500U indicates RVR along runway 22 is and rising.
- +SN indicates snow is falling at a heavy intensity. If any precipitation begins with a minus or plus, it's either light or heavy.
- BKN022 indicates a broken cloud layer with its base at above ground level. The lowest "BKN" or "OVC" layer specifies the cloud ceiling.
- OVC050 indicates an unbroken cloud layer with its base at above ground level.
- M04/M07 indicates the temperature is and the dew point is. An M in front of the number indicates that the temperature/dew point is below zero Celsius.
- Q1020 indicates the current altimeter setting is.
- NOSIG is an example of a TREND forecast which is appended to METARs at stations while a forecaster is on watch. NOSIG means that no significant change is expected to the reported conditions within the next 2 hours.
- 8849//91 indicates the condition of the runway:
- * 88 indicates either a specific runway or all the airport's runways.
- * 99 indicates repetition of the last message as no new information received.
- * 4 means the runway is coated with dry snow
- * 9 means 51% to 100% of the runway is covered
- * // means the thickness of the coating was either not measurable or not affecting usage of the runway
- * 91 means the braking index is bad, in other words the tires have bad grip on the runway
- CAVOK is an abbreviation for Ceiling And Visibility OK, indicating no cloud below or the highest minimum sector altitude and no cumulonimbus or towering cumulus at any level, a visibility of or more and no significant weather change.
- = indicates the end of the METAR
North American METAR codes
METAR KTTN 051853Z 04011KT 1/2SM VCTS SN FZFG BKN003 OVC010 M02/M02 A3006 RMK AO2 TSB40 SLP176 P0002 T10171017=
- METAR indicates that the following is a standard hourly observation.
- KTTN is the ICAO identifier for the Trenton-Mercer Airport.
- 051853Z indicates the day of the month is the 5th and the time of day is 1853 Zulu/UTC, or 1:53PM Eastern Standard Time.
- 04011KT indicates the wind is from 040° true at. In the United States, the wind direction must have a 60° or greater variance for variable wind direction to be reported and the wind speed must be greater than.
- 1/2SM indicates the prevailing visibility is SM = statute mile.
- VCTS indicates a thunderstorm in the vicinity, which means from.
- SN indicates snow is falling at a moderate intensity; a preceding plus or minus sign indicates heavy or light precipitation. Without a +/- sign, moderate precipitation is assumed.
- FZFG indicates the presence of freezing fog.
- BKN003 OVC010 indicates a broken cloud layer at above ground level and an overcast layer at.
- M02/M02 indicates the temperature is and the dew point is. An M in front of the number indicates a negative Celsius temperature/dew point.
- A3006 indicates the altimeter setting is.
- RMK indicates the remarks section follows.
- AO2 indicates that the station is automated with a precipitation discriminator sensor. Stations that aren't equipped with a rain/snow sensor are designated AO1.
- TSB40 indicates the thunderstorm began at 40 minutes past the hour at 1840 Zulu/UTC, or 1:40 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
- SLP176 indicates the current barometric pressure extrapolated to sea level is.
- P0002 indicates that of liquid-equivalent precipitation accumulated during the last hour.
- T10171017 is a breakdown of the temperature and dew point in eight digits separated into two groups of four. The first four digits indicate the temperature. The first digit designates above or below zero Celsius. The next three digits in the group "017" give the temperature in degrees and tenths of a degree Celsius,. The last four digits "1017" indicate the dew point,. Note: ASOS software, as of this update, uses whole degrees in °F to compute the °C values in this group.
- = indicates the end of the METAR.
Cloud reporting
age is reported by the number of 'oktas' of the sky that is occupied by cloud.This is reported as:
Abbreviation | Meaning |
SKC | "No cloud/Sky clear" used worldwide but in North America is used to indicate a human generated report |
NCD | "Nil Cloud detected" automated METAR station has not detected any cloud, either due to a lack of it, or due to an error in the sensors |
CLR | "No clouds below or ", used mainly within North America and indicates a station that is at least partly automated |
NSC | "No significant cloud", i.e., none below and no TCU or CB. Not used in North America. |
FEW | "Few" = 1–2 oktas |
SCT | "Scattered" = 3–4 oktas |
BKN | "Broken" = 5–7 oktas |
OVC | "Overcast" = 8 oktas, i.e., full cloud coverage |
VV | Clouds cannot be seen because of fog or heavy precipitation, so vertical visibility is given instead. |
Flight categories in the U.S.
METARs can be expressed concisely using so-called aviation flight categories, which indicates what classes of flight can operate at each airport by referring to the visibility and ceiling in each METAR. Four categories are used in the U.S.:Category | Visibility | Ceiling |
VFR | > 5 mi | and > 3000 ft AGL |
Marginal VFR | Between 3 and 5 mi | and/or Between 1,000 and 3,000 ft AGL |
IFR | 1 mi or more but less than 3 mi | and/or 500 ft or more but less than 1,000 ft |
Low IFR | < 1 mi | and/or < 500 ft |
METAR WX codes
METAR abbreviations used in the WX section. Remarks section will also include began and end times of the weather events.Codes before remarks will be listed as "-RA" for "light rain". Codes listed after remarks may be listed as "RAB15E25" for "Rain began at 15 minutes after the top of the last hour and ended at 25 minutes after the top of the last hour."
Type | Abbreviation | Meaning | Abbreviation | Meaning |
Intensity | - | Light intensity | blank | Moderate intensity |
Intensity | + | Heavy intensity | VC | In the vicinity |
Descriptor | MI | Shallow | PR | Partial |
Descriptor | BC | Patches | DR | Low drifting |
Descriptor | BL | Blowing | SH | Showers |
Descriptor | TS | Thunderstorm | FZ | Freezing |
Precipitation | RA | Rain | DZ | Drizzle |
Precipitation | SN | Snow | SG | Snow Grains |
Precipitation | IC | Ice Crystals | PL | Ice Pellets |
Precipitation | GR | Hail | GS | Snow Pellets and/or Small Hail |
Precipitation | UP | Unknown Precipitation | ||
Obscuration | FG | Fog | VA | Volcanic Ash |
Obscuration | BR | Mist | HZ | Haze |
Obscuration | DU | Widespread Dust | FU | Smoke |
Obscuration | SA | Sand | PY | Spray |
Other | SQ | Squall | PO | Dust or Sand Whirls |
Other | DS | Duststorm | SS | Sandstorm |
Other | FC | Funnel Cloud | ||
Time | B | Began At Time | E | Ended At Time |
Time | 2 digits | Minutes of current hour | 4 digits | Hour/Minutes Zulu Time |
U.S. METAR abbreviations
The following METAR abbreviations are used in the United States; some are used worldwide:METAR and TAF Abbreviations and Acronyms:
Abbreviation | Meaning | Abbreviation | Meaning |
$ | maintenance check indicator | / | indicator that visual range data follows; separator between temperature and dew point data. |
ACC | altocumulus castellanus | ACFT MSHP | aircraft mishap |
ACSL | altocumulus standing lenticular cloud | ALP | airport location point |
ALQDS | all quadrants | ALQS | all quadrants |
AO1 | automated station without precipitation discriminator | AO2 | automated station with precipitation discriminator |
APCH | approach | APRNT | apparent |
APRX | approximately | ATCT | airport traffic control tower |
AUTO | fully automated report | C | center |
CA | cloud-air lightning | CB | cumulonimbus cloud |
CBMAM | cumulonimbus mammatus cloud | CC | cloud-cloud lightning |
CCSL | cirrocumulus standing lenticular cloud | cd | candela |
CG | cloud-ground lightning | CHI | cloud-height indicator |
CHINO | sky condition at secondary location not available | CIG | ceiling |
CONS | continuous | COR | correction to a previously disseminated observation |
DOC | Department of Commerce | DOD | Department of Defense |
DOT | Department of Transportation | DSIPTG | dissipating |
DSNT | distant | DVR | dispatch visual range |
E | east, ended, estimated ceiling | FAA | Federal Aviation Administration |
FIBI | filed but impracticable to transmit | FIRST | first observation after a break in coverage at manual station |
FMH-1 | Federal Meteorological Handbook No.1, Surface Weather Observations & Reports | FMH2 | Federal Meteorological Handbook No.2, Surface Synoptic Codes |
FROPA | frontal passage | FROIN | frost on the indicator |
FRQ | frequent | FT | feet |
FZRANO | freezing rain sensor not available | G | gust |
HLSTO | hailstone | ICAO | International Civil Aviation Organization |
INCRG | increasing | INTMT | intermittent |
KT | knots | L | left |
LAST | last observation before a break in coverage at a manual station | LST | local standard time |
LTG | lightning | LWR | lower |
M | minus, less than | MAX | maximum |
METAR | routine weather report provided at fixed intervals | MIN | minimum |
MOV | moved/moving/movement | MT | mountains |
N | north | N/A | not applicable |
NCDC | National Climatic Data Center | NE | northeast |
NOS | National Ocean Service | NOSPECI | no SPECI reports are taken at the station |
NOTAM | Notice to Airmen | NW | northwest |
NWS | National Weather Service | OCNL | occasional |
OFCM | Office of the Federal Coordinator for Meteorology | OHD | overhead |
OVR | over | P | indicates greater than the highest reportable value |
PCPN | precipitation | PK WND | peak wind |
PNO | precipitation amount not available | PRES | pressure |
PRESFR | pressure falling rapidly | PRESRR | pressure rising rapidly |
PWINO | precipitation identifier sensor not available | R | right, runway |
RTD | Routine Delayed | SLP | sea-level pressure |
SLPNO | sea-level pressure not available | SM | statute miles |
SNINCR | snow increasing rapidly | SOG | snow on the ground |
SPECI | an unscheduled report taken when certain criteria have been met | STN | station |
SW | southwest | TCU | towering cumulus |
TS | thunderstorm | TSNO | thunderstorm information not available |
TWR | tower | UNKN | unknown |
UTC | Coordinated Universal Time | V | variable |
VIS | visibility | VISNO | visibility at secondary location not available |
VR | visual range | VRB | variable |
W | west | WG/SO | Working Group for Surface Observations |
WMO | World Meteorological Organization | WND | wind |
WS | wind shear | WSHFT | wind shift |
Z | Zulu, i.e., Coordinated Universal Time | - | - |
U.S. METAR numeric codes
Additional METAR numeric codes listed after RMK.Code | Description |
11234 | 6 hour maximum temperature. Follows RMK with five digits starting with 1. Second digit is 0 for positive and 1 for negative. The last 3 digits equal the temperature in tenths. This example value equals. |
20123 | 6 hour minimum temperature. Follows RMK with five digits starting with 2. Second digit is 0 for positive and 1 for negative. The last 3 digits equal the temperature in tenths. This example value equals. |
4/012 | Total snow depth in inches. Follows RMK starting with 4/ and followed by 3 digit number that equals snow depth in inches. This example value equals 12 inches of snow currently on the ground. |
402340123 | 24-hour maximum and minimum temperature. Follows RMK with nine digits starting with 4. The second and sixth digit equals 0 for positive for 1 for negative. Digits 3–5 equal the maximum temperature in tenths and the digits 7–9 equals the minimum temperature in tenths. This example value equals and. |
52006 | 3 hour pressure tendency. Follows RMK with 5 digits starting with 5. The second digit gives the tendency. In general 0–3 is rising, 4 is steady and 5–8 is falling. The last 3 digits give the pressure change in tenths of a millibar in the last 3 hours. This example indicates a rising tendency of. |
60123 | 3 or 6 hour precipitation amount. Follows RMK with 5 digits starting with 6. The last 4 digits are the inches of rain in hundredths. If used for the observation nearest to 00:00, 06:00, 12:00, or 18:00 UTC, it represents a 6-hour precipitation amount. If used in the observation nearest to 03:00, 09:00, 15:00 or 21:00 UTC, it represents a 3-hour precipitation amount. This example shows of rain. |
70246 | 24-hour precipitation amount. Follows RMK with 5 digits starting with 7. The last 4 digits are the inches of rain in hundredths. This example shows of rain. |
8/765 | Cloud cover using WMO code. Follows RMK starting with 8/ followed by a 3 digit number representing WMO cloud codes. |
98060 | Duration of sunshine in minutes. Follows RMK with 5 digits starting with 98. The last 3 digits are the total minutes of sunshine. This example indicates 60 minutes of sunshine. |
931222 | Snowfall in the last 6-hours. Follows RMK with 6 digits starting with 931. The last 3 digits are the total snowfall in inches and tenths. This example indicates of snowfall. |
933021 | Liquid water equivalent of the snow. Follows RMK with 6 digits starting with 933. The last 3 digits are the total inches in tenths. This example indicates SWE. |
WMO codes for cloud types
The following codes identify the cloud types used in the 8/nnn part.Code | Low Clouds | Middle Clouds | High Clouds |
0 | none | none | none |
1 | Cumulus | Altostratus | Cirrus |
2 | Cumulus | Altostratus | Cirrus |
3 | Cumulonimbus | Altocumulus | Cirrus |
4 | Stratocumulus | Altocumulus | Cirrus |
5 | Stratocumulus | Altocumulus | Cirrus / Cirrostratus |
6 | Stratus or Fractostratus | Altocumulus | Cirrus / Cirrostratus |
7 | Fractocumulus / Fractostratus | Altocumulus | Cirrostratus |
8 | Cumulus and Stratocumulus | Altocumulus | Cirrostratus |
9 | Cumulonimbus | Altocumulus | Cirrocumulus or Cirrocumulus / Cirrus / Cirrostratus |
/ | not valid | above overcast | above overcast |