PIREP Search: Aviation Pilot Reports
Search aviation PIREPs (pilot reports) from the last 30 days. Find turbulence reports by airport, aircraft type, flight level, or any text in the raw aviation weather report.
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Last 30 days
Search for PIREPs
Enter at least 2 characters to search. Try airport codes (e.g., JFK), aircraft types (e.g., B738), or conditions (e.g., SEV, ICE, CHOP).
About PIREP search
PIREP search lets you explore real pilot reports from the last 30 days using full-text search. Whether you are tracking conditions near a specific airport, curious about what a particular aircraft type reported, or researching how often severe turbulence is actually logged, this tool searches the complete, decoded report text instantly.
Each result is translated from raw aviation code into readable English and shows the aircraft, altitude, location, and conditions the pilot described — so you can understand what was really happening in the sky without memorizing abbreviations.
Frequently asked questions
What is a PIREP?
A PIREP, or Pilot Report, is a firsthand account from a flight crew of the conditions they actually encountered aloft — turbulence, icing, cloud tops, visibility, and more. Because they come from pilots in the air rather than ground forecasts, PIREPs are some of the most timely and trusted weather data in aviation.
What can I search for?
Search by airport or station identifier (e.g., JFK), by aircraft type (e.g., B738), or by condition codes and keywords such as SEV for severe, ICE for icing, or CHOP for choppy air. The search runs across the full decoded text of every report from the last 30 days.
How do I read a raw PIREP?
Raw PIREPs use compact aviation shorthand, but Flight Chop decodes each one into plain language for you. If you want to learn the format yourself, the Decoding PIREPs guide walks through every field with examples.