🗺️ Every receipt before the ATPL
1,500 hours, $150K, 5 stages
Average six months to lift your own first airplane. Average five to eight years to sit in the right seat of an airline cockpit. Every receipt, every check-ride, every hour between.
📋 U.S. FAA standard path — 5 stages
Private, instrument, commercial, multi-engine, ATPL. Each stage has an oral, a written, and a check-ride. Fail and you pay again.
| Stage | Certificate | Min hours | Avg cost | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PPL · Private | 40h (typical 60–70h) | $12,000–18,000 | Take a friend up. No pay. |
| 2 | IR · Instrument | 40h instrument | $8,000–12,000 | Fly in cloud. Effectively required for any career. |
| 3 | CPL · Commercial | 250h total | $20,000–35,000 | First time you can be paid. Instructing, sightseeing, freight. |
| 4 | ME · Multi-engine | +10h | $3,000–6,000 | Two engines. The first airline gate. |
| 5 | ATPL · Airline transport | 1,500h total (R-ATP 1,000–1,250h) | covered by instructor pay | Major-airline captain qualified. Age 23+. |
⚠️ Aggregate ~$50,000 (PPL→ATPL). With lifestyle, board, multi-engine PIC, or cadet program: typical $80,000–$150,000. 🟢 Tier 1 — FAA · ATP-CTP school averages
🛤️ Three routes — same ATPL, different receipt
Same destination. Origin determines cost, time, and freedom.
A. Military (USAF/USN)
Cost to you: $0 (state pays ~$1M)
Service obligation: 10 years (varies by airframe)
Pros: Advanced aircraft, free, strong network
Cons: Zero freedom, danger, frequent moves
B. Civilian self-pay (Part 61/141)
Cost: $80,000–$150,000
Time: 2–4 years + 1–3 years of hours
Pros: Free path, your pace
Cons: Debt, low pay during hour-building (instructor $30–45/hr)
C. Cadet (UAL Aviate · Delta Propel)
Cost: $90,000–$120,000 (some airline subsidy $5K–25K)
Time: ~5 years (instructor obligation included)
Pros: Title path guaranteed (regional → major)
Cons: Service obligation (5+ years if subsidized)
⏱️ Hour-building — the darkest stretch
From CPL (250h) to ATPL (1,500h), you must somehow log 1,250 hours. This stage averages 1–3 years, $30–45/hr, often while paying off debt.
Flight instructor (CFI/CFII/MEI) — most common
30–50 hours/week of flight, tied to student schedules. $30–60/hr. But every hour goes in the logbook. Average to 1,500h: 12–18 months.
Freight (Part 135) — lonely nights
Single- or twin-engine freight. Night, weather, solitude. The loneliness costs. But real IFR PIC time accrues fast.
Survey · sightseeing · banner-tow — niches
Seasonal jobs. Hours come, but not the kinds airlines value (multi-engine IFR PIC).
"R-ATP allows ATP eligibility at 1,000h for a 4-year aviation degree, 1,250h for a 2-year. But majors still look for 4,000h+ — qualification is ATPL, hiring is a different game."
🏥 Medical — the certificate renewed every year
Without a Class 1 medical, every other certificate is paper. Renewal every 6 or 12 months.
Vision
Corrected 20/20. Color vision normal. LASIK allowed (6 months stable post-op).
Hearing
Conversational at 6 ft. Hearing aids permitted.
Mental health
Major disorders or addiction → suspension. Some SSRIs allowed since the post-Germanwings 9525 reforms — more nuanced now.
Renewal cycle
Under 40: 12 months / Over 40: 6 months. Only an AME (Aviation Medical Examiner) signs.
💬 The honest line
📈 If it works: Major captain in your late 30s, $250K–$450K, 6–8 weeks vacation a year.
📉 If it slows: Mid-30s regional FO, $50K–$80K, $100K+ student debt.
🎯 What makes the difference: hour quality (multi-engine IFR PIC) · economic cycle (hiring freezes hurt) · and mandatory retirement at 65 — total flying years are your lifetime earning ceiling.
📚 Go deeper
Four sub-pages — gift, vision, path, history.