Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
    • A-E
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
    • F-L
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
    • M-S
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
    • T-Z
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    • June 2026
    • March 2026
    • Dec 2025 / Jan 2026
    • Showcase 2026
    • August / September 2025
    • June 2025
    • Archive Issues
    • Subscribe Free!
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Subscribe to magazine Subscribe to email newsletter Media Pack
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
  • News
      • Acoustic & Vibration
      • Avionics
      • Data Acquisition
      • Defense
      • Drones & Air Taxis
      • Electric & Hybrid
      • EMC
      • Engine Testing
      • Environmental Testing
      • Fatigue Testing
      • Flight Testing
      • Helicopters & Rotorcraft
      • High Speed Imaging
      • Industry News
      • Materials Testing
      • NDT
      • Simulation & Training
      • Software
      • Space
      • Structural Testing
      • Supplier News
      • Technology
      • Telemetry & Communications
      • Weapons Testing
      • Wind Tunnels
  • Features
  • Magazines
    1. June 2026
    2. March 2026
    3. Dec 2025 / Jan 2026
    4. Showcase 2026
    5. August / September 2025
    6. June 2025
    7. Archive Issues
    8. Subscribe Free!
    Featured
    16th June 2026

    In this issue: June 2026

    Online Magazines By Ben Sampson
    Recent

    In this issue: June 2026

    16th June 2026

    In this issue: March 2026

    24th March 2026

    In this issue: December 2025/January 2026

    23rd December 2025
  • Opinion
  • Webinars
  • Events
    • All Events
    • Aerospace Test & Development Show
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Suppliers
    • Supplier Spotlights
    • Press Releases
    • Technical Papers
LinkedIn YouTube X (Twitter)
Aerospace Testing InternationalAerospace Testing International
Industry News News

FAA sets out noise-based certification path for supersonic flight over the US

Ben SampsonBy Ben Sampson3rd July 20263 Mins Read
Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook Email
X-59 aircraft
X-59 takes to the skies for the first time at Palmdate, California on Tuesday, October 28, 2025 (Image: Lockheed Martin)

The FAA has proposed a noise-based certification standard that would allow civil aircraft to fly faster than the speed of sound over land for the first time since the early 1970s.

Aircraft flying at Mach 1 and above travel at more than 770mph (1,239km/h), compared with the 550-600mph (885-966km/h) typical of commercial airliners.

The proposed rule sets an interim standard permitting supersonic flight provided sonic boom overpressure at the surface does not exceed 0.11 pound per square foot (psf). It would repeal the general prohibition on civil supersonic flight in the US contained in the current regulations, first enacted in 1973 to protect the public from sonic booms.

Under the proposal, an operator would need to demonstrate through measurement, modeling or other approved methods that both primary and secondary sonic boom overpressure stays within the 0.11psf limit. The operator would then receive a finding from the Administrator and operate under any conditions and limitations the FAA issues.

The FAA expects the first generation of aircraft seeking approval to rely on flight testing to demonstrate compliance, with modeling and other methods becoming viable as the pool of test data grows. The rule is performance-based, leaving manufacturers free to develop their own means of keeping booms below the threshold rather than mandating a specific technology.

One anticipated approach is Mach cutoff, a flight technique in which aircraft design, speed, altitude and atmospheric conditions combine so that the sonic boom refracts within the atmosphere and does not reach the ground at full intensity. The FAA said initial operations under the rule are expected to be based on the technique, which leaves only low-level “evanescent waves” that NASA has measured at around the level of background street noise.

The FAA plans to propose a second rule later this year covering landing and take-off noise for supersonic aircraft, and aims to finalize both by mid-2027.

“Advances in aerospace engineering, materials science, noise reduction, and new operational concepts will eliminate the old sonic boom,” said Bryan Bedford, FAA Administrator. “This means we can ultimately repeal the ban from the 1970s on supersonic flight over US territory while minimizing noise impacts to residents in communities along the route and near airports.”

The FAA said it is drawing on research from ICAO, NASA, industry and academic institutions to inform the noise standards. In setting the 0.11psf threshold, the agency referenced data from NASA’s Farfield Investigation of No-boom Thresholds study and a 1980 study of secondary sonic booms from Concorde flights off New England.

Much of the supporting data is expected to come from NASA’s Quesst mission and its X-59 quiet supersonic aircraft, which completed its first flight in October 2025. The aircraft is designed to break up the shock waves that coalesce into a boom, producing a quieter “thump” instead.

The X-59 flew supersonic for the first time on June 5, 2026, reaching approximately Mach 1.1 at 43,400ft (13,230m), and a week later reached its mission-conditions target of Mach 1.4 at 55,000ft, according to NASA. Later mission phases will measure the aircraft’s acoustic signature and fly it over selected US communities to gather public-response data for regulators.

The FAA cautioned that low-boom aircraft design of the kind the X-59 is validating still requires further research before it can be applied to commercial aircraft, and the interim rule would not permit operations producing surface overpressure above 0.11psf.

Only four special flight authorizations for supersonic testing have been issued to date in the US, most recently to Boom Supersonic and Hermeus, according to the FAA.

Share. Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Email
Previous ArticleJoby and Toyota to scale up eVTOL manufacturing
Ben Sampson

Ben has worked as a journalist and editor, covering technology, engineering and industry for the last 20 years. Initially writing about subjects from nuclear submarines to autonomous cars to future design and manufacturing technologies, he was editor of a leading UK-based engineering magazine before becoming editor of Aerospace Testing in 2017.

Related Posts

Alt text: Joby S4 aircraft displaying Toyota and Joby branding parked on an airfield apron with its rotors raised
Drones & Air Taxis

Joby and Toyota to scale up eVTOL manufacturing

2nd July 20262 Mins Read
A white robotic bird with articulated feathered wings and a fanned tail mounted on a black display stand
News

Robotic kestrel research aims to stabilize small drones

1st July 20263 Mins Read
BETA Technologies Alia CTOL electric aircraft in flight over ocean, with Surf Air and BETA logos visible on fuselage, registration N401NZ
Electric & Hybrid

BETA launches electric aircraft demonstration program in Hawaii

29th June 20263 Mins Read
Latest Posts
X-59 aircraft

FAA sets out noise-based certification path for supersonic flight over the US

3rd July 2026
Alt text: Joby S4 aircraft displaying Toyota and Joby branding parked on an airfield apron with its rotors raised

Joby and Toyota to scale up eVTOL manufacturing

2nd July 2026
Barney Garrood of Aero Sensor and Paul Crowhurst of Evolution Measurement Group shaking hands in front of an aerosensor-branded flow probe rig

Evolution Measurement Group partners with Aero Sensor on flow probes

2nd July 2026
Supplier Spotlights
  • Precision Filters, Inc. (PFI)
  • Evolution Measurement
  • CALCULEX
  • Hottinger Brüel & Kjær
  • AVL List GmbH
  • Tekna
  • InnovMetric
  • CGM CIGIEMME S.p.A.
  • SET GmbH
  • Tyto Robotics
    Tyto Robotics Inc.
  • Bartington Instruments
    Bartington Instruments
  • Ametek
    AMETEK Programmable Power
  • Delta Information Systems logo
    Delta Information Systems
  • Helling GmbH
    Helling GmbH
  • Matec Instrument Companies, Inc.
    Matec Instrument Companies, Inc.
  • Endevco
  • Ipetronik
    IPETRONIK GmbH & Co. KG
  • VJ Technologies
  • Durr NDT
    DÜRR NDT GmbH & Co. KG
  • Dewesoft
  • Bruker Alicona Dimensional metrology & surface roughness measurement
    Bruker Alicona
  • Vzlu
    VZLU – Czech Aerospace Research Centre
  • ATG Advanced Technology Group
    ATG – Advanced Technology Group
  • Dytran Instruments, Inc.
  • Kistler Group
    Kistler Group
  • Diversified Technical Systems (DTS)
  • Scanivalve Corporation
  • G Systems
  • CEC Vibration Products LLC.
  • dSPACE
  • Safran Data Systems
  • Photron
  • YXLON International
  • Telspan Data
  • TotalTemp Technologies, Inc.
  • Vector Informatik GmbH
  • Vibration Research
  • TEST-FUCHS
  • Siemens Digital Industries Software
    Siemens Digital Industries Software
  • PCB Piezotronics, Inc.
  • Testia
  • Treo – Labor für Umweltsimulation GmbH
  • W5 Engineering
  • National Institute for Aviation Research
  • North Star Imaging
  • MK Test Systems Ltd.
  • Intertek
  • I.N.C.A.S. – NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR AEROSPACE RESEARCH “ELIE CARAFOLI”
  • FMV Test & Evaluation
  • Glenn L Martin Wind Tunnel
  • GRAS Sound & Vibration
  • Elsys AG
  • EMCCons DR. RAŠEK GmbH & Co.KG
  • European Test Services (ETS) B.V.
  • Chemetall GmbH logo
    Chemetall GmbH
  • Curtiss-Wright
  • Data Physics Corporation
  • AOS Technologies AG
  • Airmo Inc. Pressure Technologies
    Airmo Inc.® Pressure Technologies
Our Social Channels
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
Getting in Touch
  • Subscribe To Magazine
  • Contact Us
  • Meet the Team
  • Media Pack
Related Topics
  • Aircraft Interiors
  • Business Jet Interiors
FREE WEEKLY NEWS EMAIL!

Get the 'best of the week' from this website direct to your inbox every Wednesday

© Copyright 2026 Mark Allen Group. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.