ADX Prep

Reading a TAF Like a Dispatcher, Not a Pilot

The forecast tells the same story to everyone — but the dispatcher reads it for release decisions, alternates, and fuel.

A pilot reads a TAF to fly the approach. A dispatcher reads the same TAF to decide whether the flight should launch at all, what alternate to file, and how much fuel the plan needs.

The dispatcher’s lens

Where a pilot focuses on the arrival window, the dispatcher reads the whole validity period — because the release has to hold up across the entire forecast, not just at touchdown.

What drives the decisions

  1. TEMPO and PROB groups that trigger alternate requirements.
  2. Trends that affect fuel reserves.
  3. Timing of changes relative to your ETA window.

The pilot reads the TAF for the approach. The dispatcher reads it for the release.

— Dispatch trainer

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