
01 / Home base
Keflavík operations
Know the field before the weather makes it feel unfamiliar.
The pilot standard
Operational brief
Know the field before the weather makes it feel unfamiliar.
A practical briefing for operating through BIKF: preparation, ground movement, departures, arrivals and the weather that shapes the hub.
By the end
01 / Build the picture
Start with the current airport, not yesterday’s memory.
Keflavík is the centre of the Icelandair Virtual network and the handoff point between European and North Atlantic flying. Treat it as a major international airport even when VATSIM traffic is quiet.
Open the current Isavia chart set, read the NOTAMs, load the latest weather and identify the runway, departure or arrival, first constraint and likely taxi path before connecting.
- Confirm BIKF rather than Reykjavík domestic airport BIRK
- Check runway state, wind, temperature and pressure
- Review current construction, closed surfaces and chart hot spots
02 / On the ground
Slow down before the runway.
Use the aerodrome chart throughout taxi. Keep the assigned runway, intersection and full clearance in view, and identify every hold-short point before reaching it.
If a taxi instruction is unclear, stop where safe and ask. Never cross a lit or marked runway holding position without an explicit clearance from the controlling position.
- Set the transponder and verify the assigned code
- Read back runway crossings and hold-short instructions
- Complete configuration checks away from runway entry points
03 / Departure
The first restriction matters most.
Brief the lateral path, initial altitude, acceleration plan and first expected frequency. Cross-check the cleared departure against the FMS before accepting the runway.
Icelandic weather can make the transition from visual references to cloud immediate. Be in the correct automation mode, with the flight directors and navigation source verified, before takeoff power is set.
04 / Arrival
Arrive ahead of the aircraft.
Obtain the latest weather early enough to compare suitable approaches and landing performance. Brief the expected arrival, the approach from the initial point through the missed approach, and a realistic diversion plan.
When vectors, speed control or a runway change compress the arrival, protect the stable-approach gate. Ask for extra track miles or go around rather than forcing the aircraft down and slowing at the same time.
- Set and cross-check pressure using the current ATIS
- Confirm runway, minima and missed-approach altitude
- Recalculate landing performance when conditions change
Before you fly
Five checks.
Then connect.
Current Isavia charts and NOTAMs open
BIKF weather and runway condition reviewed
Taxi route and runway entry identified
First departure or arrival constraint briefed
Diversion and missed approach understood
Primary references
Go to the
source.
Operational details change. Verify revision dates and use current charts, aircraft documentation and active ATC instructions for every flight.

