Under the radar

Origin of: Under the radar

Under the radar

To be under the radar or fly under the radar is to act surreptitiously so to avoid being noticed or detected and has been used in this metaphorical sense, primarily in business and marketing circles, since the late 1980s. The expression derives, of course, from the military tactic that dates from WWII whereby low-flying aircraft could avoid being detected by radar-controlled defences. See also Radar and Off the radar.