Commercial jets can fly through most rain, yet crews reroute or wait when wind shear, hail, lightning, or severe turbulence risk rises.
Watching rain hammer the terminal windows can make any departure feel doubtful. In aviation, rain by itself is rarely the stopper. The bigger question is what comes with it: gusty winds, lightning, hail, sharp turbulence, or fast changes near the runway.
This article breaks down what airliners can handle, what still triggers delays and cancellations, and what your crew is checking while you’re waiting at the gate.
What Rain Means To A Jet
Airliners are built to fly in heavy precipitation. Rain affects two practical things: visibility and runway performance. Lower visibility can slow taxi and approach operations. Water on the runway can reduce tire grip and extend stopping distance, so crews use performance calculations tied to the latest runway condition reports.
Why The Airplane Doesn’t “Soak”
The fuselage is sealed and pressurized. Doors have layered seals, and the structure has drain paths. Jet engines are tested for water ingestion, and they keep running because airflow and combustion stay stable across a wide range of moisture levels.
Can Planes Fly In Rain Storms? How Crews Decide
Airline decisions are procedural. Dispatchers plan the route, fuel, and alternates. Pilots check airport weather, runway reports, and warnings tied to convective activity. Air traffic control manages spacing and assigns storm-avoidance routes when needed.
If the rain is part of a broad, steady system and winds are within limits, flights often operate with minor delays. If the rain is part of a thunderstorm line, the safe path through the airspace may not exist for a period of time, so departures or arrivals pause.
The Three Checks That Drive Go Or Wait
- Departure path: storms near the airport can block climb corridors, even when the runway looks usable.
- Arrival path: storm cells can block approach routes, forcing holding or diversions.
- Ground safety: lightning near the field can pause fueling, loading, and pushback.
Thunderstorms Change The Rules
In daily talk, “rain storm” often means “thunderstorm.” In aviation, a thunderstorm is treated as a bundle of hazards: sharp turbulence, wind shear, microbursts, icing at certain levels, heavy rain, hail, and frequent lightning. Crews don’t try to slip between cells. They go around them by miles, and controllers build traffic flows around where storms are moving.
Lightning: The Ramp Stopper
Airplanes can take lightning strikes and keep flying, yet lightning near the airport can shut down ramp work. If crews can’t fuel, load bags, or connect ground equipment safely, the flight waits until the lightning threat clears.
Hail: The Risk Airlines Avoid
Hail can damage windshields, nose cones, leading edges, and engine inlets. Even small hail can pit surfaces that need to stay smooth. Radar helps, yet hail can hide inside the strongest cells, so airlines avoid the entire cell, not just the rain shaft.
For an official rundown of thunderstorm hazards and the reasons pilots keep large storm buffers, see the FAA’s AC 00-24C “Thunderstorms”.
What Happens Near The Ground
Most weather risk is concentrated near the runway. That’s where braking matters, where wind shear can change fast, and where visibility can drop at the worst moment. It’s also where the airplane has less time and altitude to reset.
Takeoff In Rain
On takeoff, rain mainly affects runway grip and spray. Wind is often the bigger limiter. Pilots verify the aircraft is accelerating as planned, and they’ll stop departures if wind shear alerts trigger or gusts exceed runway limits.
Landing In Rain
On approach, crews need a stable path, stable speed, and legal visibility minimums. If the approach becomes unstable or wind shifts rapidly, a go-around is normal. If the airport stays blocked, the flight may divert to the planned alternate.
What The Plane Does In The Air
Once airborne, crews aim for smooth air and a clean margin from hazards. The cockpit workload rises because the crew is scanning radar, coordinating deviations, and watching ride quality so the cabin stays safe.
Weather Radar And Its Limits
Onboard radar paints precipitation. Strong returns often line up with stronger updrafts and downdrafts, so it’s a useful guide. It still can’t show all hazards, and crews adjust radar settings and cross-check with reports from other aircraft.
Turbulence: The Part You Feel
Turbulence is bumpy air, not a sign the airplane is “falling.” Airliners are certified for loads beyond routine bumps. The risk is injuries inside the cabin, so the seat belt sign comes on early and cabin service may pause.
Icing: When Cold Layers Stack Up
Icing needs cold air and supercooled droplets. In warm-season storms, the freezing level can be high, so the climb and descent may stay in above-freezing air even while it’s pouring. In cooler months, icing can be closer to the ground. Airliners use wing and engine anti-ice systems and follow strict procedures when icing is expected.
Table: Storm-Day Hazards And What Airlines Do About Them
These are the conditions that drive delays and reroutes, plus the operational response you’re most likely to see.
| Hazard | What It Means For The Flight | Typical Action |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy Rain | Lower visibility; wet runway; spray during ground roll | Adjust speeds and braking; space traffic; brief delay for a stronger band |
| Thunderstorm Cell Near The Airport | Blocked departure or arrival corridors; fast wind shifts | Pause departures or arrivals; vector around cells; hold traffic |
| Lightning Near The Field | Ramp crews must pause fueling and loading | Gate hold until lightning clears; resume in stages |
| Wind Shear Or Microburst Risk | Rapid wind and airspeed changes close to the runway | Delay, change runway, or go around; use onboard alerts |
| Hail Risk | Possible airframe and windshield damage inside convection | Reroute wide; avoid cells by large margins |
| Low Ceiling Or Low Visibility | Approach not legal below published minimums | Hold, divert, or cancel; use alternate airport plan |
| Standing Water On Runway | Longer stopping distance; hydroplaning risk | Use longer runway; wait for drainage; adjust landing distance data |
| In-Flight Turbulence | Ride discomfort; injury risk if unbuckled | Change altitude or route; keep seat belt sign on |
| Icing In Freezing Layers | Ice can form on airframe surfaces in cold clouds | Use anti-ice; climb or descend; de-ice on the ground when needed |
Why Delays Happen Even When The Rain Looks Manageable
From the terminal, you see one runway and one patch of sky. Around a busy airport, arrivals and departures funnel through fixed corridors. A storm line ten miles off the departure end can block climbs in one direction. Another cell over a route fix can choke arrivals from a wide region.
Controllers also need extra spacing when many flights deviate around storms. When a lot of aircraft request the same detour, the system slows, and the delay can ripple to other cities.
If you want to see the convective warnings crews monitor, the National Weather Service Aviation Weather Center publishes current layers and graphics on its SIGMETs display.
What You Can Do On A Stormy Travel Day
Storm-day travel is a game of options. These steps don’t change the weather, yet they can cut stress and reduce missed connections.
Book Earlier When You Can
Thunderstorms often build later in the day in many regions. An early departure can beat the peak cycle and gives the airline more slack if disruptions start piling up.
Build Time Into Connections
Short connections assume normal taxi times and on-time arrivals. Storms can turn a quick taxi into a long crawl, or turn a routine arrival into a hold. Extra connection time gives you room to breathe.
Pack For Gate Holds
Keep must-haves in your personal item: water, a snack, chargers, and anything you can’t be without during a long wait. If you’re traveling with kids, bring one quiet activity that’s new to them.
Stay Buckled When Seated
This is the simplest safety habit on bumpy days. Turbulence tied to storm outflow can arrive with little warning.
Table: Weather Terms You Might Hear In Announcements
Airlines and controllers use shorthand. Knowing the basics can make updates feel clearer.
| Term | What It Signals | What It Might Mean For You |
|---|---|---|
| Ground Stop | Flights bound for an airport are held at their origins | Late departure from your city; fewer airborne holds |
| Gate Hold | Aircraft stays parked due to weather or congestion | Delayed pushback; less fuel burn than a long taxi |
| Hold | Aircraft circles while waiting for a landing slot | Late arrival; diversion becomes possible if it drags on |
| Reroute | Planned route is changed to avoid storms | Longer flight time; smoother ride if routing avoids cells |
| Alternate | Backup airport in the flight plan | Possible diversion if the destination stays blocked |
| De-icing | Ground treatment to remove ice or prevent buildup | Extra time at the gate before takeoff |
| Wind Shear Alert | Rapid wind change near the runway is detected | Takeoff or landing pause; go-around more likely |
A One-Page Checklist To Keep Handy
- Check earlier flights before booking when storms are in the forecast.
- Choose a connection with extra time during storm season.
- Keep water, a snack, and a charger in your personal item.
- Stay buckled while seated.
- When a hub is getting hit, review rebooking options early.
Rain doesn’t ground modern airliners. Thunderstorm hazards, strong winds, and runway limits do. If your crew delays or diverts, it’s because the safe corridor through the airspace isn’t there yet.
References & Sources
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“AC 00-24C, Thunderstorms.”Explains thunderstorm hazards such as wind shear, microbursts, hail, and why aircraft avoid storms by large margins.
- National Weather Service Aviation Weather Center (NWS AWC).“GFA: SIGMETs.”Provides SIGMET layers and graphics used to flag hazardous weather that can drive reroutes, holds, and ground delays.
