
MSFS 2024 ATC Tips: If you’re new to Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, ATC can feel intimidating. Suddenly, you’re being given headings, altitudes, squawk codes, runway changes… and you’re just trying to keep the aircraft straight. The good news? You don’t need to be a real-world pilot to use ATC properly.
Let’s simplify it.
What ATC Actually Does in MSFS 2024
Air Traffic Control in MSFS 2024 helps you:
- Get departure clearance
- Follow assigned altitudes
- Receive headings and vectors
- Transition to approach
- Get landing clearance
You can use it for:
- Casual VFR flying
- Structured IFR airline flights
- Practice with realistic procedures
Or ignore parts of it completely.
VFR vs IFR: Why It Matters
Before using ATC, decide what kind of flight you’re doing.
VFR (Visual Flight Rules)
- You fly visually
- Minimal ATC involvement
- Mostly traffic advisories
- Good for scenic or GA flights
IFR (Instrument Flight Rules)
- Full ATC interaction
- Assigned altitudes
- SID and STAR procedures
- Approach clearance required
If you’re flying something like a Cessna 172, VFR is perfectly fine.
If you’re flying a 737 or A320, IFR makes more sense.
Step-By-Step: Simple IFR Workflow
Here’s a basic airline-style flow:
- Load your flight plan (World Map or SimBrief).
- Tune the ATC panel.
- Request IFR clearance.
- Copy assigned altitude.
- Set altitude in autopilot.
- Taxi after clearance.
- Contact tower for takeoff.
- Follow the climb instructions.
- Expect vectors or direct-to instructions.
- Receive approach clearance.
- Land after tower clearance.
You don’t need to understand every instruction at first.
Just respond correctly and set what they tell you.
The Biggest Beginner Mistakes
1️⃣ Ignoring Altitude Assignments
If ATC assigns 6,000 ft and you climb to 10,000, they’ll keep yelling at you.
Always:
- Dial the assigned altitude
- Engage vertical mode correctly (VNAV, V/S, or ALT SEL depending on aircraft)
2️⃣ Forgetting to Respond
If you don’t acknowledge instructions, ATC may cancel IFR.
Always click the correct response option.
3️⃣ Not Updating the Altimeter
When descending, you’ll often hear:
“Altimeter 29.92” (or similar)
Set it.
Otherwise, your altitude readout won’t match ATC.
4️⃣ Autopilot Not Following the Flight Plan
If ATC says:
“Turn left heading 270”
But your aircraft keeps following the flight plan…
You must switch from NAV mode to HDG mode.
This is one of the most common beginner frustrations.
How to Make ATC Less Stressful
If you’re just learning:
- Turn off AI co-pilot ATC handling (so you learn it yourself)
- Slow down the sim rate if needed
- Pause when confused
- Start with short 30–45 minute routes
The sim doesn’t care if you take your time.
What About Realism?
MSFS ATC is improving, but it’s not perfect.
Sometimes:
- Runway assignments change oddly
- Vectors don’t make sense
- Phraseology feels repetitive
That’s normal.
For higher realism later, you can explore:
- VATSIM (live human ATC)
- Pilot2ATC
- BeyondATC (AI-driven ATC)
But that’s advanced territory.
For now, learn the in-sim system properly first.
When You Should Ignore ATC
Yes — sometimes you should.
Examples:
- You’re doing bush flying
- You’re practicing circuits
- You’re doing scenic GA flights
- ATC glitches
You’re in control of your sim.
ATC is a tool — not a rule.
Final Advice for Beginners
Don’t try to master everything at once.
Start with:
- Short IFR flights
- Basic altitude compliance
- Simple approach procedures
After 5–10 flights, it becomes second nature.
And once it clicks, your entire experience changes.
ATC stops being stressful — and starts feeling immersive.
