Addis Ababa Bole International Airport turbulence forecast
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
ADD (Addis Ababa, Ethiopia) sits at 8.98°N, 38.80°E, 7,630 ft elevation — coastal.
About ADD
Major airport serving Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
- Climate
- High-altitude — thinner air, large diurnal temperature swings
- Geography
- Coastal — marine-influenced airmass
What to expect on departures
Computed from ADD's geography and climate
At 7,630 ft, ADD's elevation reduces climb performance compared with sea-level airports — afternoon thermals and mechanical turbulence in the first few thousand feet of climbout are felt for longer. At tropical latitude the jet stream is rarely directly overhead, so clear-air turbulence is less of a routine concern from ADD. Convective weather closer to the surface is the dominant turbulence source instead. Addis Ababa's tropical climate means convective build-up is a year-round concern — afternoon and early-evening departures from ADD encounter the most cell activity. Morning slots and red-eye departures are typically the smoothest of the day.
Climbout notes
Climbout typically transitions from cool marine air to warmer continental air — a brief bumpy layer near the boundary is normal on summer afternoons.
Seasonal pattern
Convective turbulence cycles with the local wet/dry season rather than a strict calendar month — check regional rainy-season dates for the most accurate risk window.
- Peak turbulence
- Regional wet season
- Typically calmest
- Regional dry season
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ADD turbulence FAQ
Is turbulence common on flights from ADD?
Addis Ababa Bole International Airport is best described as a tropical convective airport. At 7,630 ft, ADD's elevation reduces climb performance compared with sea-level airports — afternoon thermals and mechanical turbulence in the first few thousand feet of climbout are felt for longer.
When is turbulence worst for Addis Ababa flights?
Convective turbulence cycles with the local wet/dry season rather than a strict calendar month — check regional rainy-season dates for the most accurate risk window. Peak turbulence window: Regional wet season. Typically calmest: Regional dry season.
How does ADD's high elevation affect flights?
Sitting at 7,630 ft, density altitude is a genuine consideration — aircraft need longer takeoff rolls and climbout is shallower than at sea-level airports. That means more time in the lower atmosphere, where thermal and mechanical turbulence is most common, especially on warm summer afternoons.
How accurate are Turbcast forecasts?
We combine live NOAA Aviation Weather Center data (PIREPs, SIGMETs, AIRMETs) with physics-based Ellrod and Richardson-number calculations derived from Open-Meteo pressure-level wind and temperature data. If a source is unavailable for a waypoint we show an em dash rather than invent a number.
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