PILOT TRAININGUpdated May 2026

Pilot Training FAQ

Answers to the questions student pilots ask most often — from getting started to checkride day.

Getting Your Private Pilot License

To earn an FAA Private Pilot Certificate you need to:

  • Be at least 17 years old (16 for solo privileges)
  • Hold a valid third-class medical certificate (or BasicMed)
  • Log at least 40 flight hours (20 with an instructor, 10 solo)
  • Pass the FAA written knowledge test (minimum score 70)
  • Pass a practical exam (checkride) with an FAA Designated Pilot Examiner

Most students complete their PPL in 60–70 hours total. Use PlanesChat to connect with a CFI and track your progress.

The FAA minimum is 40 total hours. This includes at least 20 hours of dual instruction (with a CFI) and 10 hours of solo flight. The solo time must include at least 5 hours of solo cross-country flying and one solo cross-country of at least 150 nautical miles with full-stop landings at two different airports.

In practice, most students need 60–70 hours before they are ready for the checkride. Accelerated programs can sometimes get students ready closer to the 40-hour minimum.

Most students complete their PPL in 3–6 months flying 2–3 times per week. Students who fly daily can finish in as little as 6–8 weeks. The biggest time factors are:

  • Weather (especially in areas with frequent IFR conditions)
  • Aircraft and instructor scheduling availability
  • Consistency — gaps between lessons slow progress significantly

In 2026, a private pilot license typically costs $10,000–$16,000 depending on location, aircraft type (Cessna 172 vs. Piper Archer vs. newer glass-panel aircraft), and your total hours needed. The budget breaks down roughly as:

  • Aircraft rental: $150–$250/hour (wet rate, fuel included)
  • Flight instructor fee: $60–$120/hour
  • Written test fee: ~$175
  • Checkride fee: $700–$1,000
  • Books and supplies: $200–$400

Medical Certificates

It depends on what privileges you want:

  • Third-class — Required for student and private pilot operations. Valid 60 months if under 40, 24 months if 40 or older.
  • BasicMed — A lighter alternative to a third-class. Requires a medical self-assessment and a visit with a state-licensed physician every 48 months. Cannot fly above 18,000 ft or faster than 250 KIAS.
  • Second-class — Required for commercial pilot operations. Valid 12 months.
  • First-class — Required for ATP (airline) operations. Valid 12 months under 40, 6 months over 40.

Use the PlanesChat Directory to locate an FAA Aviation Medical Examiner (AME) near you.

Possibly. Many conditions that would previously disqualify a pilot can now be accommodated through the FAA's Special Issuance (SI) process, also called an Authorization. Common conditions that can receive Special Issuance include controlled diabetes (with insulin), treated hypertension, history of cardiac events, and various mental health diagnoses.

If you have a medical concern, consult an Aviation Medical Examiner before applying. AOPA also operates a free medical certification service for members.

Finding Instructors and Examiners

The best ways to find a Certified Flight Instructor:

  • PlanesChat CFI directoryBrowse FAA-verified instructors by location, rating, and aircraft type
  • Local flight schools and Part 141 academies
  • Airport FBOs (Fixed-Base Operators)
  • FAA's Airmen Inquiry database to verify a CFI's certificate

Browse FAA-verified instructors directly in the PlanesChat Directory.

A Designated Pilot Examiner (DPE) is an FAA-authorized civilian examiner who conducts practical tests (checkrides) on behalf of the FAA. During your checkride, the DPE will:

  • Review your logbook, endorsements, and application (IACRA)
  • Conduct an oral exam testing your aeronautical knowledge
  • Evaluate your flight maneuvers to the Airman Certification Standards (ACS)

DPE fees typically range from $700–$1,000 for a private pilot checkride. Find a DPE near you in the PlanesChat Directory.

Aviation Weather

A METAR (Meteorological Aerodrome Report) is a standardized weather observation issued at airports, typically every hour. A typical METAR looks like:

KBOS 201856Z 28012KT 10SM FEW025 BKN080 17/09 A2992

This decodes to: Boston Logan, 20th at 18:56Z, winds 280° at 12 knots, 10 SM visibility, few clouds at 2,500 ft, broken at 8,000 ft, temp 17°C, dew point 9°C, altimeter 29.92.

Read the complete decoding guide: How to Read a METAR. Or check live auto-decoded METARs on PlanesChat Weather.

VFR (Visual Flight Rules) — Flying with visual reference to the ground. VFR minimums in Class G airspace are 1 SM visibility and clear of clouds. In Class E and above, you need 3 SM and specific cloud clearances.

IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) — Flying by reference to instruments, typically when in clouds or below VFR minimums. You need an Instrument Rating (IR) to fly IFR legally. An IR requires 50 hours of cross-country PIC time and 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time.

Flight categories (LIFR / IFR / MVFR / VFR) are shown in color on every METAR in PlanesChat.

Next Steps After PPL

Common add-ons after your PPL:

  • Instrument Rating (IR) — Fly in IMC. Requires 50 hours XC PIC, 40 hours instrument time.
  • Commercial Pilot Certificate (CPL) — Get paid to fly. Requires 250 total hours.
  • Multi-Engine Rating — Fly twins. Added to any certificate.
  • Flight Instructor Certificate (CFI) — Teach students. Most efficient way to build hours toward ATP minimums.
  • ATP Certificate — Fly for the airlines. Requires 1,500 hours (1,000 with a four-year aviation degree, 750 with a military background).

Yes. The path typically looks like: PPL → Instrument Rating → Commercial → CFI → build 1,500 hours (often instructing) → ATP written → Regional Airline First Officer → major airline captain. With a four-year aviation degree, the ATP minimums drop to 1,000 hours at certain carriers.

Many students who become CFIs use PlanesChat to connect with student pilots while building their own hours.

Connect with the Aviation Community

Ask your question, find a CFI, check live METARs, and connect with pilots near you — all free on PlanesChat.

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