Yes, airliners can land in rain if wind, visibility, braking, and runway reports stay within published minimums.
Rain on the window can feel like a hard no for flying. It isn’t. Most airline landings happen on instrument procedures, with aircraft and crews built to handle wet conditions.
What changes in rain is the margin. The runway gets slicker. Visibility can drop fast. Wind can swing. A “rainy day landing” can shift from routine to “nope” in minutes, and the trigger is usually one measurable limit, not fear.
What Rain Changes During Landing
Rain itself rarely stops an arrival. The knock-on effects do. Think of rain as the ingredient that can turn other factors into a hard limit.
Three things move the needle right away: what the crew can see, how the airplane will stop, and how stable the wind is near the runway.
Visibility And Ceiling Are The First Gate
If the runway environment can’t be seen by the required point on the approach, the landing can’t continue. That “required point” depends on the type of approach and the published minimums.
Airports use visibility measures like runway visual range (RVR), which is a sensor-based readout along the runway that helps determine whether an approach is legal and sensible. Runway Visual Range (RVR) explains what those sensors measure and how controllers use the data.
Wet Runways Change Stopping Distance
Rain lowers tire grip. That means longer landing distance and a higher chance of hydroplaning when water builds up. Crews account for this with performance calculations that include runway length, aircraft weight, flap setting, use of reverse thrust, and runway surface condition reports.
A wet runway is still workable. A runway with standing water, poor braking reports, or contamination reports that suggest low friction can push it into “go somewhere else.”
Wind And Gusts Decide Whether The Airplane Stays Aligned
Rain often arrives with shifting winds. If crosswinds or gust spread exceed aircraft or company limits, landing stops. This is less about comfort and more about controllability: the airplane must be kept on centerline, especially in the flare and rollout.
Even when winds are under the maximum, sudden gusts can force a go-around. That’s normal. It’s also one of the safest choices a crew can make.
Can Planes Land In Rainy Weather? What Actually Stops A Landing
A landing gets stopped by numbers and reports. Some are hard legal minimums. Some are airline limits set to keep runway overrun risk low. Either way, they’re specific and measurable.
Minimums On The Approach Plate
Instrument approaches publish minimum descent altitudes or decision altitudes paired with visibility requirements. If the reported visibility is below the published minimums for that procedure, the approach may not be allowed, or it may be started with the expectation of going missed if the view doesn’t meet the rule at the decision point.
That’s why rain sometimes leads to a “we tried once” pattern. The crew can fly the procedure, reach the decision altitude, and then go around if the runway cues aren’t in sight.
Runway Condition Reports And Braking Action
Airports and pilots share runway condition and braking information. If reports point to low friction or poor braking, landing distance grows and directional control gets harder. Airlines treat this with extra caution because a wet runway overrun can happen fast when speed, tailwind, and runway length stack up the wrong way.
The FAA’s advisory circular on runway overrun risk lays out how crews and operators assess the hazard and set conservative operating practices. AC 91-79A (Mitigating the Risks of a Runway Overrun Upon Landing) is a solid reference for the factors that raise risk on landing.
Standing Water And Hydroplaning Risk
Hydroplaning happens when tires ride on a film of water instead of contacting pavement. When that happens, braking and steering effectiveness drop. Crews watch for heavy rain rates, puddling, and runway grooving conditions. If the runway can’t shed water, a diversion becomes the smart call.
Airports help with grooving, drainage design, and runway maintenance, but weather can still overwhelm it.
Convective Weather Near The Runway
Rain tied to thunderstorms is a different animal than steady rain. Storm outflow can produce sharp wind shifts and turbulence on final. Lightning near the field can pause ramp work and slow operations. A line of storms can also block safe routing in and out of the terminal area.
When you hear “air traffic flow program” or “ground stop,” it’s often storms driving it, not rain alone.
Low-Level Wind Shear Alerts
Wind shear is a rapid change in wind speed or direction close to the ground. It can show up with strong rain shafts, fronts, or storm outflow boundaries. Airports may issue alerts from detection systems and pilot reports. If alerts are active at a level that exceeds airline criteria, approaches pause until conditions settle.
This is one reason two planes can arrive minutes apart with different outcomes: the wind field can change quickly.
Tailwind Limits And Runway Choice
Tailwind increases landing distance and reduces braking margin, and wet pavement makes that penalty sting more. If the runway in use has a tailwind beyond limits, ATC may switch runways. If a switch isn’t available due to traffic flow or terrain, flights may hold or divert.
That runway switch can also slow arrivals for a while since spacing and taxi patterns change.
Decision Chain: Who Chooses To Land Or Divert
It’s not one person making a gut call. It’s a chain of roles, each with a slice of responsibility.
Dispatch And Flight Planning Set The First Guardrails
Airline dispatch plans alternates and fuel based on forecast conditions. If the destination has steady rain with decent visibility, that’s routine. If forecasts show low visibility, gusts, or storms, dispatch may load more fuel, select a closer alternate, or route around weather.
That planning matters because holding and multiple approach attempts burn fuel quickly.
Air Traffic Control Manages Spacing And Runway Use
ATC keeps aircraft separated and sequences arrivals. In rain, they may increase spacing to account for braking distance on the runway and missed approach traffic. They also coordinate runway changes and flow programs.
ATC can restrict, slow, or stop arrivals, yet the final “can we land this airplane right now?” decision sits with the flight crew.
The Pilot In Command Makes The Final Call
Even with a cleared approach, the crew can go around or divert if conditions don’t meet limits or if the approach becomes unstable. That’s standard practice. A go-around is a normal maneuver, not a near-miss.
If you feel a sudden surge of thrust and climb near the runway, you may have experienced a go-around triggered by wind, spacing, visibility, or runway reports.
Rain Scenarios And What They Mean For Your Flight
Not all rainy days behave the same. Here’s how common patterns tend to play out.
Light Steady Rain With Good Visibility
This is the “business as usual” version. The runway is wet, braking calculations account for it, and the approach continues like a normal IFR arrival.
You might notice a firmer touchdown as crews aim for a specific touchdown zone to protect stopping margin.
Heavy Rain Bursts That Come And Go
Short bursts can slam visibility down, then clear. You may see holding patterns or a sequence of go-arounds when the rain core sits over the airport.
Airlines can also slow arrivals to avoid stacking too tightly, since missed approaches create extra traffic in the same airspace.
Rain With Gusty Crosswinds
This is where many diversions happen. Crosswinds plus a wet runway reduce directional control margin during rollout. Even when the aircraft can land within limits, airlines may apply stricter internal caps based on runway geometry, braking reports, and gust spread.
You may also see runway changes to line up more into the wind, which can delay arrivals while the system resets.
Rain With Thunderstorms Nearby
Storms can block approach paths, force reroutes, and create abrupt wind shifts on final. Even if the airport is “open,” the safest route into it may not exist for a while.
This is also when gate operations can slow. Lightning risk can pause ramp activity, which means arriving planes may wait for a gate even after landing.
Limits That Matter Most In Rain
Airline operations are built around published limits. Some are public in approach procedures. Some are aircraft limitations. Others are company procedures meant to keep safety margin wide.
Below is a practical map of the most common “rain-related” stop points and what you’ll notice as a traveler.
| Trigger In Rainy Conditions | Why It Stops Or Slows A Landing | What You’ll Notice |
|---|---|---|
| Visibility or RVR below approach minimums | Runway cues aren’t available by the required point on the approach | Holding, a go-around, or diversion to an alternate |
| Ceiling too low for the procedure in use | Cloud base blocks required visual references near decision altitude | Multiple attempts, then “we’re going to our alternate” |
| Crosswind or gust spread beyond limits | Directional control margin drops on flare and rollout on wet pavement | Approach discontinued late, or runway change announcements |
| Tailwind above limits | Landing distance grows and braking margin shrinks on wet runway | Delays while ATC switches runways or meters arrivals |
| Poor braking action or low runway condition reports | Stopping distance and steering effectiveness become uncertain | Longer landing roll, then taxi delays; diversions increase |
| Standing water or hydroplaning risk | Tires can lose contact with pavement, reducing braking and steering | Long holds, then diversion if water persists |
| Wind shear alerts near the runway | Rapid wind changes can destabilize approach path and energy state | Go-arounds clustered together; arrivals pause, then restart |
| Thunderstorm outflow near final approach | Wind shifts and turbulence rise sharply near touchdown | Sudden delays even when it’s “only raining” at the gate |
| Reduced arrival rate set by ATC | More spacing needed for runway occupancy time and missed approaches | Extended time in the air before landing clearance |
What Airlines Do Differently On Wet Runways
When the runway is wet, crews don’t “wing it.” They adjust technique and planning in predictable ways.
They Protect The Touchdown Zone
Landing long is a common precursor to runway overruns. In rain, crews aim to touch down in a defined zone, not float. That can feel firm compared to a calm dry-day landing.
A stable approach matters here: speed, descent rate, and alignment must be within criteria early. If not, crews go around.
They Use More Conservative Stopping Tools
Brakes, spoilers, and reverse thrust all help slow the aircraft. Airlines may use higher autobrake settings on a wet runway, or deploy reverse thrust to a higher level for better deceleration, based on company procedures and runway reports.
You may hear a longer roar of reverse thrust after touchdown in rain. That’s normal.
They Plan Fuel For Holds And Second Attempts
Rain with low ceilings can produce “one attempt, go around, try again” patterns. Fuel planning accounts for that possibility, plus a diversion to a listed alternate airport.
If delays stack up, dispatch may advise crews to divert earlier, before fuel margins tighten.
They Coordinate Closely With Dispatch
Dispatch can provide updated runway reports, braking action, and airport status changes. Crews use that stream of information to decide whether a second attempt makes sense or whether it’s time to move on.
That’s why you sometimes see a diversion that feels sudden. The numbers may have shifted quickly while you were in the air.
What You Can Do As A Passenger When It’s Raining At Arrival
You can’t change the weather. You can make the experience less chaotic by knowing what the likely outcomes are and acting early.
Watch For These Clues In Airline Messages
Airlines tend to use plain language: “weather at destination,” “air traffic control delay,” “waiting for gate,” “reroute,” “holding.” Each points to a different bottleneck.
If the message mentions “ATC delay,” the airport may be landing fewer aircraft per hour. That often clears in waves.
Pick Seats And Connections With Weather In Mind
If you’re booking during a season with frequent rain and storms, longer connection times give you breathing room. Tight connections are where weather turns into missed flights.
Carry essentials in your personal item: charger, meds, a light layer, and a snack. When diversions happen, the timeline can stretch.
Know What A Diversion Usually Means
A diversion is a planned outcome, not an emergency. Crews head to a suitable airport, refuel if needed, then continue when conditions allow. Sometimes a new crew is required if duty limits are hit.
If you divert, focus on two things: keeping your phone charged and getting in the rebooking line early, even if that’s a chat queue.
| What You See | Most Likely Meaning | Smart Next Step |
|---|---|---|
| “Holding for weather” | Visibility, wind, or runway reports dipped below limits | Stay seated, save battery, expect updates in 10–20 minute blocks |
| Go-around near the runway | Runway not in sight at decision point, wind shift, or spacing issue | Assume another attempt or diversion based on fuel and traffic |
| “ATC delay program” | Arrival rate reduced due to storms or runway configuration | Check connection status and alternate flights before landing |
| Landing, then long taxi with stops | Reduced ramp flow, wet-surface caution, or gate congestion | Message contacts, keep seatbelt on, avoid standing early |
| “Waiting for gate” | Gate occupied, ramp paused, or staffing slowed by weather | Open the airline app and line up rebooking options as a backup |
| Diversion announced mid-hold | Limits aren’t improving fast enough for your fuel and duty window | Text family, screenshot boarding pass, keep carry-on essentials handy |
Why Some Airports Handle Rain Better Than Others
Two airports can share the same rain and behave differently. The difference often comes down to runway layout, lighting, approach equipment, and drainage.
More Runway Options Reduce Delays
Airports with multiple runways pointed in different directions can pick the one most aligned with the wind. That lowers crosswind and tailwind pressure during rain events.
Better Lighting And Approach Systems Help In Low Visibility
Precision approach systems, runway centerline lights, and touchdown zone lighting can support lower visibility operations. When rain reduces visibility, these systems can keep the airport usable longer before hitting minimums.
Drainage And Surface Treatment Matter
Grooved pavement and strong drainage reduce standing water. That lowers hydroplaning risk and supports more predictable braking. Airports invest in these features, yet extreme rainfall can still create pooling.
What To Take Away
Planes land in rain every day. The catch is that rain can drag other factors into limit territory: low visibility, gusty crosswinds, wind shear, poor braking, and standing water.
If your flight delays or diverts on a rainy day, it’s usually because one of those measurements crossed a line that crews and airlines won’t cross. That’s the system doing its job: keeping the landing boring, repeatable, and safe.
References & Sources
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“VGLS – Runway Visual Range (RVR).”Explains how runway visibility is measured and used for takeoff and landing decisions in low visibility.
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“AC 91-79A (Mitigating the Risks of a Runway Overrun Upon Landing).”Details operational risk factors on landing, including wet runway hazards and practices that reduce overrun risk.
