These notes break down every clause of the chapter into plain instructional language for student pilots — while keeping every exact regulatory value, limit and rule unchanged. Colour-coded boxes are used throughout: Blue = definitions/concepts, Green = procedures & allowances, Red = strict limitations & prohibitions, Amber = instructor & exam tips.
The whole chapter sits on a single safety idea: an aircraft is only allowed to fly if it has been designed, constructed and operated in line with the proper airworthiness requirements. The authority that sets and enforces those requirements for a particular aircraft is the State of Registry of that aircraft.
In simple terms: compliance with airworthiness requirements ⟶ the aircraft earns a C of A ⟶ the C of A declares it fit to fly. Without that declaration, the machine is not permitted in the air.
Remember the logic chain — Design & Build correctly → Operate per requirements → Issue C of A → "Fit to fly". The C of A is about the individual aircraft; keep it separate in your mind from the Type Certificate (covered in Section 6), which is about the design of the whole type.
Airworthiness does not live in isolation. The Standards of Annex 6, Part I — which deal with aeroplane performance operating limitations — are described as complementary to the airworthiness Standards of Annex 8. Both Annexes state broad objectives, but they look at the aircraft from two different angles.
Annex 8 deals with airworthiness from the engineering point of view. Annex 6 (Part I) covers the subject from the operational and safety point of view. Together they form one complete picture.
| Aspect | ICAO Annex 8 | ICAO Annex 6, Part I |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | Airworthiness of Aircraft | Operation of Aircraft (International Commercial Air Transport — Aeroplanes) |
| Point of view | Engineering point of view | Operational & safety point of view |
| Core content | Airworthiness design & construction Standards | Aeroplane performance operating limitations |
| Nature | Both state broad objectives • the two are complementary to each other | |
The ICAO Council has urged Contracting States not to impose on visiting aeroplanes operational requirements other than those established by the State of Registry — provided those State-of-Registry requirements are not lower than the Standards of Annex 6, Part I.
A foreign aeroplane visiting another State should be judged by its own State of Registry's rules — not by a fresh set of local rules — as long as the State of Registry's rules at least meet the Annex 6, Part I floor. This avoids burdening international operations with duplicate requirements.
To make it easy to import, export, lease, charter or interchange aircraft and to support international air navigation, ICAO places a duty on the State of Registry to recognise and render valid an airworthiness certificate issued by another Contracting State.
A foreign C of A is recognised only on the condition that the airworthiness requirements under which it was issued or rendered valid are equal to or above the minimum standards that ICAO may establish from time to time. If the standards fall below the ICAO minimum, recognition does not follow automatically.
flowchart LR
A["Aircraft holds a C of A
issued by another
Contracting State"] --> B{"State of Registry checks:
Are the airworthiness requirements
EQUAL TO or ABOVE the ICAO
minimum Standards?"}
B -- "Yes" --> C["State of Registry
RECOGNISES & RENDERS
VALID the certificate"]
B -- "No" --> D["Certificate NOT
automatically rendered valid"]
ICAO is realistic about its own limits. It is recognised that ICAO Standards would not replace national regulations. ICAO Standards set the broad framework; the fine, detailed work of certifying individual aircraft needs a fuller, more detailed national code.
National codes of airworthiness — containing the full scope and extent of detail that an individual State considers necessary — are required as the basis for the certification of individual aircraft. ICAO's broad Standards alone are not detailed enough to certify a specific machine.
Every State is free to either —
Annex 8 includes broad Standards which define — for application by the national airworthiness authorities — the minimum basis for the recognition by States of Certificates of Airworthiness, so that aircraft of other States can fly into and over their territories.
By setting that minimum basis, the Standards achieve — among other things — the protection of other aircraft, third parties and property.
The level of airworthiness to be maintained by a national code is indicated by the broad Standards of Annex 8, supplemented where necessary by guidance material in ICAO's Airworthiness Technical Manual — Doc 9760.
Two reference labels are frequently tested: Annex 8 = Airworthiness of Aircraft, and Doc 9760 = Airworthiness Technical Manual. Memorise the document number exactly.
While the C of A applies to an individual aircraft, the Type Certificate applies to the design of a whole type — and it is issued by a different authority.
The State of Design, upon receipt of satisfactory evidence that the aircraft type (or engine type or propeller type, if certificated separately) complies with the design aspects of the appropriate airworthiness requirements, shall issue a Type Certificate. The Type Certificate:
| Certificate | Issued / Acted on by | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Type Certificate | State of Design | Defines the type design of the aircraft / engine / propeller and signifies its approval — applies to the design of the type. |
| Certificate of Airworthiness | State of Registry (Director-General) | Declares an individual aircraft fit to fly / in a condition for safe operation. |
| Special Flight Permit | Director-General | May be issued, on application, to permit a flight while the C of A is suspended (see Section 9). |
State of Design ⟶ issues the Type Certificate. State of Registry ⟶ responsible for the C of A and continuing airworthiness. A common exam trap is swapping these two.
At present, the technical Standards dealing with the certification of aeroplanes are limited to:
Multi-engined aeroplanes of OVER 5 700 kg maximum certificated take-off mass.
Note the precise wording: "over" 5 700 kg (not "up to"), "multi-engined", and the mass is the maximum certificated take-off mass.
These technical Standards include requirements relating to:
Annex 8 is divided into four parts:
| Part | Content |
|---|---|
| Part I | Definitions |
| Part II | Procedures for certification and continuing airworthiness of aircraft |
| Part III | Technical requirements for the certification of new large aeroplane designs |
| Part IV | Helicopters |
flowchart TD
X["ICAO ANNEX 8
Airworthiness of Aircraft"]
X --> P1["PART I
Definitions"]
X --> P2["PART II
Procedures for Certification
& Continuing Airworthiness"]
X --> P3["PART III
Technical Requirements —
Certification of New Large
Aeroplane Designs"]
X --> P4["PART IV
Helicopters"]
"Def — Cert — Design — Heli" ⟶ Part I Definitions, Part II Certification & continuing airworthiness procedures, Part III new large aeroplane Designs, Part IV Helicopters.
Following the events of hijacking and terrorist acts on board aircraft, special security features have been built into aircraft design to improve the protection of the aircraft.
These features include:
This part of the chapter moves from the international ICAO framework to the national rules administered by the Director-General (DGCA). It covers how a C of A is issued, modified, suspended, cancelled and revalidated.
The owner or operator of an aircraft may apply to the Director-General for —
The Director-General may issue a C of A or special C of A in respect of an aircraft when:
Both conditions (a) and (b) must be met — they are joined by "and", not "or".
flowchart TD
A["Owner / Operator of the aircraft"] -->|"Applies"| B["Director-General (DGCA)"]
B --> C{"Both conditions checked"}
C --> D["Condition (a)
Applicant furnishes documents /
evidence of airworthiness
as specified by the DG"]
C --> E["Condition (b)
DG satisfied the aircraft is
airworthy OR in a condition
for safe operation"]
D --> F{"Conditions (a) AND (b)
both satisfied?"}
E --> F
F -- "Yes" --> G["C of A / Special C of A
ISSUED"]
F -- "No" --> H["Certificate NOT issued"]
A person shall NOT carry out any modification or repair affecting the safety of any aircraft that holds a valid certificate of airworthiness — unless:
The key trigger phrase is "affecting safety". Such a modification or repair is permitted in only two situations — when the rules require it, or when the DG has given prior approval. "Prior" means before the work, not after.
A C of A or special C of A is deemed to be suspended automatically when an aircraft falls into any one of the following four situations:
flowchart TD
S["C of A is DEEMED SUSPENDED
when the aircraft..."]
S --> A["(a) Ceases / fails to conform
with the rules — operation,
maintenance, modification, repair,
replacement, overhaul,
process or inspection"]
S --> B["(b) Is modified or repaired
OTHERWISE THAN per
the provisions of the rules"]
S --> C["(c) Suffers
MAJOR DAMAGE"]
S --> D["(d) Develops a MAJOR DEFECT
affecting safety of the aircraft
/ occupants in subsequent flights"]
If, at any time, the Director-General is satisfied that reasonable doubt exists as to the safety of an aircraft, or as to the safety of the type to which that aircraft belongs, he may take either of the following actions:
flowchart TD
R["Director-General is satisfied
REASONABLE DOUBT exists
about safety of the aircraft
or of its type"]
R --> O1["Option (a)
SUSPEND or CANCEL
the C of A / Special C of A"]
R --> O2["Option (b)
REQUIRE modification, repair,
replacement, overhaul, inspection
(incl. flight tests & examination)
under an approved person"]
O2 --> Y["Compliance becomes a CONDITION
of the C of A remaining in force"]
O1 --> Z["Aircraft must NOT be flown
while the C of A is suspended"]
Z --> SFP["On application by owner / operator,
the DG MAY issue a
SPECIAL FLIGHT PERMIT"]
An aircraft shall NOT be flown during any period for which its C of A or special C of A is suspended or deemed to be suspended.
Where the C of A or special C of A is suspended (or deemed suspended), the Director-General may, upon an application by the owner or operator, issue a special flight permit. This is the lawful route to move/fly the aircraft despite the suspension.
The aircraft "shall not be flown" — that is absolute. But the DG "may" issue a special flight permit — that is discretionary, and only on the owner/operator's application. Watch these modal words carefully in exam questions.
Where a flight manual is required to be kept for an aircraft in accordance with the provisions of these rules, the Director-General shall endorse the certificate of airworthiness of the aircraft accordingly.
Every aircraft shall be fitted and equipped with the instruments and equipment — including radio apparatus and special equipment — as may be specified according to the use and the circumstances under which the flight is to be conducted.
Note that the required instruments/equipment are not fixed — they depend on the type of operation and the circumstances of the flight (e.g. day/night, VFR/IFR). The fitment list scales with how and where the aircraft is used.
Self-Test All five chapter questions, the correct option, and the reasoning behind each answer.
| Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | B | B | C | B |
flowchart LR
A["Design & build per
airworthiness requirements"] --> B["Type Certificate
(State of Design)"]
B --> C["Owner/Operator applies
to the Director-General"]
C --> D["C of A ISSUED —
aircraft 'fit to fly'"]
D --> E{"Aircraft stays
in compliance?"}
E -- "Yes" --> F["C of A remains valid
(continuing airworthiness)"]
E -- "No / damage / defect / doubt" --> G["C of A suspended,
deemed suspended
or cancelled"]
G --> H["Aircraft must not fly —
DG may issue a
Special Flight Permit"]