FAA imposes 5G operating limits on aircraft flying to Canada from 1 July, with ~1,000 US-registered aircraft affected

The FAA issued new operating limitations and airworthiness directives tied to 5G radio-frequency interference risk for aircraft operating in Canadian airspace starting 1 July. The rules require equipment “tolerant” capability or radio-altimeter upgrades and block non-tolerant jets from certain low-visibility approaches.

Discovered 2026-06-30T09:46:09.517943-07:00 | 2026-06-30T09:46:09.517943-07:00

Briefing

What Hype is tracking

  • FAA actions tighten avionics/spectrum compatibility requirements for Canada-bound operations beginning 1 July, including restrictions for non-tolerant aircraft on key low-visibility approaches.
  • The FAA estimates the directives will affect about 1,000 US-registered aircraft, creating near-term compliance, dispatch planning, and upgrade-or-retrofit pressures across transport fleets.
  • These steps build on earlier FAA Canada 5G airworthiness directives for specific aircraft types, reinforcing that spectrum-related risk management will remain a recurring regulatory theme (source:dbe809e4-eec8-4001-8967-c38d4a77bf15).

Reported By

FlightGlobal GlobalAir.com airwaysmag.com
Sources Tracked
3
First Seen
2026-06-30T09:46:09.517943-07:00
Latest Update
2026-06-30T15:32:06.836634-07:00
Coverage
Aviation

Sources

Hype groups these reports into one evolving story so you can compare coverage without losing the thread.

Related Coverage