PPL Written Test: Free Study Guide 2026
Your Free Guide to Acing the Private Pilot Knowledge Test
The Private Pilot Knowledge Test is the first major written exam in your flying career. With 60 questions, a 2.5-hour time limit, and a 70% passing score, it is manageable with proper preparation. This free study guide covers everything you need to know to score well above the passing mark.
Test Format and Structure
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Number of questions | 60 multiple choice |
| Time limit | 2 hours 30 minutes |
| Passing score | 70% (42 correct) |
| Target score | 85%+ (51 correct) |
| Question types | Recall, application, scenario-based |
| Test center | PSI testing centers nationwide |
| Cost | $175 |
| Valid for | 24 calendar months |
Subject Areas and Weighting
| Subject | Approximate Questions | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Regulations (FAR/AIM) | 10-12 | High |
| Weather and weather services | 10-12 | High |
| Navigation and cross-country | 8-10 | High |
| Aerodynamics | 5-7 | Medium |
| Aircraft performance | 5-7 | Medium |
| Airport operations | 4-6 | Medium |
| Weight and balance | 3-5 | Medium |
| Aeromedical factors | 3-4 | Low |
| Radio communications | 2-3 | Low |
| Emergency procedures | 2-3 | Low |
Subject-by-Subject Study Guide
Regulations (FARs)
The most tested regulatory areas for the PPL:
Part 61 -- Certification: Pilots
- Student pilot, recreational pilot, and private pilot privilege and limitations
- Recent experience requirements (3 takeoffs and landings in 90 days for passengers, including night)
- Medical certificate requirements and duration
- Logging pilot-in-command time requirements
Part 91 -- General Operating and Flight Rules
- Right-of-way rules (in order: balloons, gliders, airships, aircraft towing, aircraft in distress)
- Minimum safe altitudes (1,000 feet over congested areas, 500 feet over others)
- VFR weather minimums by airspace class
- Equipment requirements for day and night VFR (A TOMATO FLAMES / FLAPS)
- Preflight responsibilities and fuel requirements (30 minutes day, 45 minutes night VFR)
VFR Weather Minimums
Memorize this table -- it appears on nearly every PPL knowledge test:
| Airspace | Visibility | Cloud Clearance |
|---|---|---|
| Class B | 3 SM | Clear of clouds |
| Class C | 3 SM | 500 below, 1,000 above, 2,000 horizontal |
| Class D | 3 SM | 500 below, 1,000 above, 2,000 horizontal |
| Class E (below 10,000) | 3 SM | 500 below, 1,000 above, 2,000 horizontal |
| Class E (at/above 10,000) | 5 SM | 1,000 below, 1,000 above, 1 SM horizontal |
| Class G (day, below 1,200 AGL) | 1 SM | Clear of clouds |
| Class G (night, below 1,200 AGL) | 3 SM | 500 below, 1,000 above, 2,000 horizontal |
Weather
Focus on practical weather knowledge:
METARs: Learn to decode every element including wind, visibility, weather phenomena, sky condition, temperature/dewpoint, and altimeter setting.
TAFs: Understand the time format, change groups (FM, BECMG, TEMPO, PROB), and how to determine forecast conditions at a specific time.
Weather hazards to know:
- Thunderstorm avoidance (20 miles minimum)
- Types of fog (radiation, advection, upslope, frontal)
- Structural icing conditions and pilot actions
- Wind shear recognition and avoidance
- Mountain wave turbulence
Navigation
Pilotage and dead reckoning:
- Using sectional charts and visual landmarks
- E6B calculations for groundspeed, heading, time en route, fuel burn
- Magnetic variation and compass deviation corrections
VOR navigation:
- Interpreting CDI indications with TO/FROM
- Determining position from two VOR radials
- Tracking inbound and outbound on a radial
Sectional chart interpretation:
- Airspace boundaries and dimensions
- Obstacle symbols and maximum elevation figures
- Airport symbols, runway information, and traffic patterns
Aerodynamics
Key concepts:
- Four forces: Lift, weight, thrust, drag and their relationships
- Angle of attack: The angle between the chord line and relative wind
- Stall: Occurs at the critical angle of attack regardless of airspeed, attitude, or power
- Load factor: How bank angle increases load factor (60-degree bank = 2G)
- Ground effect: Reduced induced drag within one wingspan of the ground
- Left-turning tendencies: Torque, P-factor, spiraling slipstream, gyroscopic precession
Performance and Weight and Balance
- Density altitude: Calculate using pressure altitude and temperature deviation
- Takeoff and landing performance: Use POH charts and apply corrections for temperature, altitude, wind, and runway surface
- Weight and balance: Calculate takeoff weight, landing weight, and CG position. Determine if within limits.
The 4-Week Study Plan
Week 1: Regulations and Airspace
- Study FAR Parts 61 and 91
- Memorize VFR weather minimums for all airspace classes
- Learn airspace classifications and dimensions
- Complete 100 practice questions on regulations
Week 2: Weather and Navigation
- Study METAR and TAF interpretation
- Learn weather hazards and pilot actions
- Practice E6B calculations
- Study VOR navigation and sectional chart reading
- Complete 100 practice questions
Week 3: Aerodynamics and Performance
- Study the four forces and stall characteristics
- Review aircraft performance charts
- Practice weight and balance calculations
- Study aeromedical factors and emergency procedures
- Complete 100 practice questions
Week 4: Review and Test Prep
- Take 3 full-length practice exams
- Review all missed questions and understand why
- Focus additional study on lowest-scoring areas
- Schedule and take the exam
Free Study Resources
| Resource | Type | URL |
|---|---|---|
| FAA Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge | Textbook (free PDF) | faa.gov |
| FAA Airplane Flying Handbook | Textbook (free PDF) | faa.gov |
| FAR/AIM | Regulations (free online) | ecfr.gov |
| Rotate Question Bank | Practice questions | [Start practicing](/) |
| AOPA Air Safety Institute | Free courses | aopa.org |
| FAA Safety Team (FAASTeam) | Free webinars | faasafety.gov |
Common PPL Test Mistakes
- Airspace confusion -- Class B, C, D, E, and G each have different entry requirements, weather minimums, and equipment needs
- Wind triangle errors -- Practice E6B until it is automatic. Check your work by ensuring the answer makes physical sense
- Regulation numbers -- The test loves specific numbers. Know VFR fuel minimums, currency requirements, and altitude rules
- Chart reading -- Practice reading sectional charts regularly. Know every symbol.
- Performance interpolation -- Many students read performance charts incorrectly. Practice with your actual aircraft's POH.
The Bottom Line
The PPL written test is very passable with 3-4 weeks of dedicated study. Use free resources, take lots of practice exams, and focus your time on the highest-weighted subjects. A score of 85%+ is realistic for any motivated student and will make your checkride oral exam much smoother.
*Practice for your PPL test with our [free question bank](/tools/quiz) and test your knowledge across all private pilot subjects. Ready to go further? Explore our [ATPL question bank](/) to see what lies ahead in your pilot career.*
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