Quantcast

Why pilots use strategic lateral offsets when crossing oceans

Airline Stocks Led The Travel Industry's Record 2024 Rally. Here's What's Next.
It’s beginning to look like another record for holiday travel
Qatar Airways cleans up at the World Travel Awards
Qantas engineers walk off job on one of the busiest travel days of the year
South Korea to safeguard competition after Korean Air, Asiana merger
China Southern returns to Adelaide
Global Airline Industry Revenues Forecast To Top $1 Trillion For First Time In 2025
EasyJet to launch six new routes from the UK next year with £24 flights
Here's Why Analysts Say It's a Good Time to Buy Airline Stocks
A No-Frills Airline Is Getting Into the Premium Game
TAKING OFF: Major airline introduces new inflight service rules with less time to order your drinks
2 Delta flight attendants fail breathalyzer test before flight to JFK
EasyJet reveals plans for new flights from regional UK airport next summer
Airlines not switching quickly enough to green jet fuel, study says
Alaska Airlines tech issue briefly grounds planes in Seattle, disrupts bookings on Cyber Monday
US Senate panel criticizes rising airline seat fees, will call execs to testify
Spirit’s Demise Is a Lesson in ‘Airline-o-nomics’
Inside BA’s new first-class suites: £800 an hour for most private seat
Focus: US airline flight crews confident and angry as unions seek richer contracts
Hawaiian Airlines Eliminates Widebody Route Amid Alaska Airlines Merger
US budget airlines are struggling. Will pursuing premium passengers solve their problems?
Delta CEO says the Trump administration will reverse government ‘overreach’ seen under Biden
Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy: How will it affect your travel plans?
British Airways yet to identify cause of latest IT meltdown
Delta Airlines Will Start Serving Shake Shack Cheeseburgers Next Month
United Sees Nearly 30% Surge in Travel to European Christmas Markets
Budget airline Israir to launch flights between Israel and NY, ending wartime monopoly by flagship carrier El Al
Asia's airlines blame supply chain woes for disrupted operations
Qantas and Qatar Airways: Planned partnership in the Australian aviation industry under the microscope
Spirit Airlines delays release of Q3 financial results as debt restructuring talks heat up
Why pilots use strategic lateral offsets when crossing oceans
Policy
Webp pat
Patrick Shanahan, President and CEO of Spirit AeroSystems | Simple Flying

Most commercial flights crossing the Atlantic Ocean use a practice known as the Strategic Lateral Offset Procedure (SLOP) to enhance safety. While flight tracking apps may show aircraft flying in parallel lines, pilots often intentionally fly one or two nautical miles to the right of their assigned routes. This method is not due to navigation errors but is a deliberate measure aimed at reducing the risk of midair conflicts.

The SLOP system was introduced through ICAO Doc 4444 in the early 2000s and became a standard in North Atlantic High-Level Airspace around 2015. The approach is based on probability and predictability; by distributing aircraft laterally within a corridor, it significantly lowers the chance that two planes will occupy the same space at the same time.

Before entering oceanic airspace—where radar coverage is absent—pilots program these offsets into their Flight Management System (FMS). The autopilot then maintains this path without requiring additional workload from pilots or affecting fuel consumption and flight times. SLOP effectively creates a three-mile-wide safety buffer along each route.

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

Air traffic over the North Atlantic operates under the North Atlantic Organized Track System (NAT-OTS), which is managed by Gander Oceanic Control in Canada and Shanwick Oceanic Control in the United Kingdom. These tracks are redrawn daily to account for wind patterns and traffic density, with vertical separation set at 1,000 feet between flight levels 290 and 410.

Without radar, crews rely on GPS, inertial reference systems, and procedural reporting for separation. SLOP adds another layer of statistical protection by having pilots offset slightly to the right—usually by one or two nautical miles. This reduces risks from position or altitude errors, turbulence, or deviations.

Offsets also help minimize wake turbulence effects when lighter aircraft follow heavier jets such as Boeing 777s or Airbus A380s. By flying laterally displaced from these larger planes’ paths, following aircraft avoid potentially hazardous air vortices.

The use of SLOP has expanded globally beyond the Atlantic to include Pacific, Indian Ocean, South Atlantic routes, and polar corridors. Oversight authorities recommend similar offset practices depending on region-specific requirements.

Modern airliners automate SLOP via FMS logic integrated with GPS and Inertial Reference Systems. Pilots input an offset value; thereafter, navigation adjustments occur automatically without manual intervention. According to IFATCA’s guidance from 2009, “operators with automatic SLOP capability may apply it ‘without specific ATC clearance,’ provided they remain within the right-side offset range.”

Older aircraft lacking automation must stay on route centerlines but are now rare among long-haul fleets. Even with advancements like satellite-based tracking using ADS-B and ADS-C technology—which improve monitoring but not physical separation—SLOP remains crucial for maintaining safe distances between aircraft.

On heavily trafficked routes like those over the North Atlantic, reduced lateral spacing between tracks (from 60 nautical miles down to 25) has been made possible due to precise navigation technologies working together with procedures like SLOP.

Beyond preventing collisions, SLOP offers additional benefits such as improved passenger comfort by avoiding wake turbulence encounters and increased tolerance for minor navigation errors or temporary altitude deviations during turbulence or autopilot issues.

Ultimately, SLOP reflects aviation’s culture of layered safety: building redundancy into systems so that no single failure leads to disaster. The procedure is an example of how simple measures can quietly underpin one of history’s safest modes of transportation.

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Flying Food Group, Inc. has announced its Employees of the Month at its LAV facility.

Oct 28, 2025

Flying Food Group's San Francisco facility recently celebrated Hispanic Heritage Month with its employees.

Oct 28, 2025

Etihad Airways has announced the launch of a new route connecting Abu Dhabi and Addis Ababa.

Oct 27, 2025

United Airlines has unveiled its Summer 2026 schedule, which includes new flights from Newark to Bari, Split, Santiago de Compostela, and Glasgow, as well as from Newark to Seoul and Washington, D.C., to Reykjavik.

Oct 27, 2025

Ethiopian Airlines has announced a limited-time 20% discount on fares between Addis Ababa and Porto.

Oct 27, 2025

Avianca has announced that passengers are encouraged to register for the Biomig biometric migration system to avoid lines and delays at participating airports in Colombia.

Oct 27, 2025