Private Pilot License (PPL) Requirements in 2026
The Private Pilot License (PPL) is the first major milestone in any pilot's journey. It allows you to fly aircraft for personal use, carry passengers, and explore the freedom of flight. Here are the complete requirements for 2026 across the three major aviation authorities.
FAA Private Pilot Certificate
Eligibility
- Age: 17 years old to take the checkride (solo at 16)
- Language: Ability to read, speak, write, and understand English
- Medical: Class 3 medical certificate or BasicMed
Flight Experience Requirements
- Total time: 40 hours minimum (national average is 60-70 hours)
- Dual instruction: 20 hours minimum with an authorized instructor
- Solo flight: 10 hours minimum, including:
- 5 hours solo cross-country
- One solo cross-country of 150+ nm with full-stop landings at 3 points
- 3 solo takeoffs and landings at a controlled airport
- Night flying: 3 hours dual instruction, including:
- One cross-country over 100 nm
- 10 takeoffs and landings to a full stop
- Instrument training: 3 hours dual instruction on instruments
- Exam prep: 3 hours of test preparation with instructor within 2 months of checkride
Knowledge Test
- 60 multiple-choice questions
- 2.5 hours time limit
- 70% passing score
- Topics: aerodynamics, weather, regulations, navigation, aircraft systems
Practical Test (Checkride)
- Oral examination: 1-2 hours
- Flight test: 1-1.5 hours
- Covers all areas of operation from the Airman Certification Standards (ACS)
EASA Private Pilot License
Eligibility
- Age: 17 years old for license issue (solo at 16)
- Language: Language proficiency Level 4 minimum (ICAO scale)
- Medical: Class 2 medical certificate
Flight Experience Requirements
- Total time: 45 hours minimum
- Dual instruction: 25 hours minimum
- Solo flight: 10 hours minimum, including:
- 5 hours solo cross-country
- One solo cross-country of 150+ nm (270 km) with full-stop landings at 2 aerodromes
- Instrument training: Included in dual instruction
Theoretical Knowledge Exams
- 9 subjects (subset of ATPL subjects)
- Multiple choice format
- 75% passing score per subject
- Computer-based testing at approved centers
Skill Test
- Conducted by an authorized examiner
- Covers all exercises from the training syllabus
- Must pass within 6 months of completing training
DGAC Private Pilot License
Eligibility
- Age: 17 years old (solo at 16)
- Language: Spanish proficiency required (varies by country)
- Medical: Class 2 medical certificate
Flight Experience Requirements
- Total time: 40-45 hours (varies by country)
- Dual instruction: 20-25 hours
- Solo flight: 10 hours minimum with cross-country requirements
- Requirements vary by specific DGAC jurisdiction (Mexico, Chile, Peru, etc.)
Exams
- Theoretical knowledge exam covering aviation fundamentals
- Practical skill test with designated examiner
Step-by-Step Process
1. Medical First
Get your medical certificate before anything else. This confirms you are physically eligible to fly and prevents wasting money on training if an issue arises.
2. Choose a Flight School
Visit several schools. Consider:
- Aircraft fleet condition and availability
- Instructor experience and teaching style
- Schedule flexibility
- Pass rates on checkrides
- Airport environment (busy vs. quiet)
3. Ground School
Start learning theory concurrently with flight training:
- Self-study with apps like Rotate
- Online ground school courses
- In-person classroom ground school
- Study at your own pace, but stay ahead of your flight training
4. Flight Training
The typical sequence:
- Pre-flight and basic maneuvers (Flights 1-5)
- Pattern work and landings (Flights 5-10)
- Practice area: stalls, slow flight, steep turns (Flights 8-15)
- Navigation and cross-country (Flights 12-20)
- First solo (typically 15-25 hours)
- Solo cross-country flights (after solo)
- Night flying (if required)
- Checkride preparation (final 5-10 hours)
5. Knowledge Test
- Take after completing ground school
- Schedule at a testing center
- Results are valid for 24 months
6. Checkride
- Schedule with a Designated Pilot Examiner (DPE)
- Oral exam covers regulations, weather, systems, and scenarios
- Flight test covers all maneuvers to ACS standards
- Pass both to earn your PPL
PPL Privileges and Limitations
You CAN:
- Fly single-engine aircraft (as rated)
- Carry passengers
- Fly day and night (with night training)
- Fly VFR (Visual Flight Rules)
- Share operating expenses equally with passengers
- Fly internationally (with proper documentation)
You CANNOT:
- Fly for compensation or hire
- Fly in IMC without an instrument rating
- Fly multi-engine aircraft without additional rating
- Act as a required crew member on airline flights
Estimated Costs and Timeline
| Item | Cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Medical certificate | $100 - $200 | 1 appointment |
| Ground school | $200 - $2,000 | 1-3 months |
| Flight training | $8,000 - $14,000 | 3-6 months |
| Knowledge test | $175 | 1 day |
| Checkride | $500 - $800 | 1 day |
| **Total** | **$9,000 - $17,000** | **3-6 months** |
Start Your PPL Journey
The theory study is something you can begin today, for free. Understanding aerodynamics, regulations, and weather before your first flight lesson makes every hour in the aircraft more productive — and saves you money. Rotate offers free access to PPL-relevant content with quizzes to test your knowledge as you go.
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