The Complete Checkride Guide: Oral Exam + Flight Test
By Renzo, CPL · Updated March 2026
The FAA checkride is the final gate between you and your pilot certificate. Whether you are preparing for your private pilot practical test or stepping up to an instrument or commercial checkride, this guide covers everything: what to bring, what the DPE will ask, what maneuvers you will fly, the tolerances you must hold, and the most common reasons applicants fail. Read this before your checkride and show up prepared.
Last updated: March 2026 · Sources: FAA ACS, 14 CFR Part 61, DPE interviews
1. What is a Checkride?
A checkride -- formally called a "practical test" by the FAA -- is the final evaluation you must pass to earn a pilot certificate or rating. It is administered by a Designated Pilot Examiner (DPE), an experienced pilot authorized by the FAA to conduct practical tests on its behalf.
Every checkride has two parts: an oral examination (ground portion) and a flight test (practical portion). You must pass both parts. If you fail the oral, the DPE will not proceed to the flight test. If you pass the oral but fail the flight, you keep credit for the oral and only need to retest the flight portion.
The DPE is not your enemy. Their job is to determine whether you meet the standards set out in the Airman Certification Standards (ACS) for the certificate or rating you are seeking. They are evaluating your knowledge, risk management, and skills. Most DPEs are professional, fair, and want you to succeed -- but they will not pass you if you are not ready.
Think of the checkride as a demonstration of everything your flight training has taught you. If you have been flying consistently, studying the material, and your CFI has endorsed you, you have already done the hard part. The checkride is the final confirmation.
2. Types of Checkrides
Every pilot certificate and rating requires its own checkride. Here is a brief overview of each, from the first one most pilots take (Private Pilot) through the Airline Transport Pilot certificate.
Private Pilot (PPL)
14 CFR 61.103-61.117Basic airmanship, cross-country planning, airspace, weather, regulations, emergency procedures.
Instrument Rating (IR)
14 CFR 61.65IFR procedures, approaches (ILS, VOR, GPS), holding patterns, weather interpretation, lost comms.
Commercial Pilot (CPL)
14 CFR 61.123-61.133Advanced maneuvers (chandelles, lazy eights, steep spirals), commercial operations, higher precision standards.
Certified Flight Instructor (CFI)
14 CFR 61.183-61.197Teaching ability, fundamentals of instruction, spin awareness, lesson planning, endorsement requirements.
Airline Transport Pilot (ATP)
14 CFR 61.153-61.167Multi-engine operations, advanced weather, crew resource management, SID/STAR procedures, high-altitude operations.
This guide focuses primarily on the Private Pilot checkride, as it is the most common and the foundation for all subsequent checkrides. However, the structure, tips, and preparation strategies apply to every level. See our Instrument Rating and Private Pilot pages for certificate-specific resources.
3. Before the Checkride
IACRA Application
Before your checkride, you must start an application in IACRA (Integrated Airman Certification and Rating Application) at iacra.faa.gov. Your CFI will log in to IACRA to provide their recommendation and endorsement. The DPE will complete the application after a successful checkride, and it becomes your temporary certificate. Start this process at least a week before your scheduled date so there is time to resolve any issues.
Required Endorsements
Your CFI must provide specific endorsements in your logbook under 14 CFR 61.39. These include: a training endorsement certifying you are prepared for the practical test, a knowledge test endorsement (if not already tested), and for the private pilot certificate, endorsements for any areas where the DPE identified knowledge deficiencies on your written exam (if applicable). Without proper endorsements, the DPE cannot begin the checkride.
Documents to Bring
Arrive organized. Missing any of these items can result in the DPE canceling or postponing your checkride.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Government-issued photo ID | Valid driver's license or passport. |
| Pilot certificate (if upgrading) | Current certificate for add-on ratings (e.g., PPL for instrument rating). |
| Medical certificate | Current and appropriate class for the certificate sought. |
| Logbook | With all required endorsements from your CFI, including the sign-off for the practical test. |
| FAA Knowledge Test results | Passing score within the preceding 24 calendar months. |
| IACRA application | Started online at iacra.faa.gov with your CFI's recommendation. |
| Aircraft maintenance records | Airworthiness certificate, registration, annual inspection, AD compliance, 100-hour (if applicable). |
| POH / AFM | Pilot's Operating Handbook for the aircraft you are flying. |
| Weight and balance data | Current W&B for the specific aircraft, computed for the flight. |
| Cross-country flight plan | Pre-planned XC with navigation log, weather briefing, NOTAMS, and fuel calculations. |
| Charts and supplements | Current sectional, TAC (if applicable), Chart Supplement (A/FD), and approach plates for IR. |
| View-limiting device | Foggles or a hood for simulated instrument flight. |
Pro tip: Use our Weight & Balance calculator to compute your W&B for the checkride flight. Having a printed W&B shows the DPE you take performance planning seriously.
4. The Oral Exam
The oral exam is where many checkrides are won or lost. It typically lasts 1-2 hours for a private pilot checkride (longer for CFI). The DPE will sit across from you with your cross-country plan, your logbook, and the ACS, and ask you questions about a wide range of topics.
This is not a rapid-fire quiz. The DPE is having a conversation with you about flying. They want to know that you understand the material well enough to make safe decisions as pilot in command. Many questions will be scenario-based: "You are planning your cross-country and you see this METAR -- what do you do?" or "Your engine starts running rough on the downwind leg -- walk me through your actions."
You are allowed to reference the FAR/AIM, POH, and other publications during the oral. The DPE expects you to know where to find information, not to have every regulation memorized verbatim. However, you should know the commonly tested regulations (cloud clearances, required equipment, pilot currency) from memory, and use the books only for specific numbers or procedures.
Oral Exam Topic Areas
Airspace and Regulations
Classes A through G, special use airspace, VFR weather minimums, Part 91 regulations, pilot privileges and limitations, required inspections (AROW, AV1ATE).
Weather Theory and Interpretation
METARs, TAFs, prog charts, convective SIGMETs, airmass thunderstorms, wind shear, icing, fog types. Be ready to interpret a real weather briefing and make go/no-go decisions.
Aircraft Systems
Engine (induction, ignition, fuel, oil, cooling), electrical system, pitot-static instruments, gyroscopic instruments, vacuum system, flaps, landing gear.
Performance and Weight & Balance
Density altitude effects, takeoff and landing distance charts, cruise performance tables, CG calculations and limits, effects of CG position on stability.
Cross-Country Planning
Route selection, fuel burn calculations, true course and heading, wind correction angle, checkpoints, diversion planning, lost procedures.
Emergency Procedures
Engine failure on takeoff and in cruise, electrical fire, engine fire, carburetor icing, vacuum failure, emergency gear extension, forced landing site selection.
Aerodynamics
Four forces, angle of attack, stall speed and load factor, Vg diagram, P-factor, torque, adverse yaw, ground effect, spins (entry, recovery, awareness).
Want to practice oral exam questions? Rotate has hundreds of practice questions covering every oral exam topic area. Take a free practice test or use our METAR decoder to sharpen your weather interpretation skills.
5. The Flight Test
After passing the oral exam, you will move to the aircraft for the flight test. Plan for 1 to 1.5 hours of flying. The DPE will typically have you begin your cross-country flight plan, then divert you after 10-20 minutes to begin the maneuver portion. Some DPEs integrate maneuvers into the cross-country; others fly to a practice area and work through them sequentially.
You are the pilot in command for the entire flight. That means you are responsible for all preflight actions, radio communications, traffic scanning, and aeronautical decision-making. The DPE is observing and directing which maneuvers to perform, but you run the show. If ATC gives you an instruction, you comply. If weather deteriorates, you make the call.
Communicate with the DPE. Before each maneuver, briefly state what you are about to do: clear the area, set up, execute. After the maneuver, do not ask "How was that?" -- just move on to the next task. The DPE will tell you if something needs to be repeated.
Maneuvers and Standards (Private Pilot)
| Maneuver | ACS Standard |
|---|---|
| Steep Turns | 45-degree bank, +/-100 ft altitude, +/-10 kts airspeed, roll out +/-10 degrees of entry heading. |
| Slow Flight | Maintain altitude +/-100 ft, heading +/-10 degrees, airspeed +5/-0 kts at the specified configuration. |
| Power-Off Stall | Proper recovery at first indication of stall. Minimal altitude loss, maintain heading +/-10 degrees. |
| Power-On Stall | Full power, pitch up to stall. Recover at first aerodynamic buffet. Heading +/-10 degrees. |
| Ground Reference Maneuvers | Turns around a point and S-turns. Constant radius/distance from reference, altitude +/-100 ft. |
| Unusual Attitudes | Recognize and recover promptly. Nose-high: add power, reduce AOA. Nose-low: reduce power, level wings, pull up. |
| Emergency Procedures | Engine failure: best glide, identify field, attempt restart, emergency checklist, simulate 7700 and 121.5. |
| Navigation / Cross-Country | Track planned course within +/-3 NM, identify checkpoints, compute revised ETA/fuel. Divert on request. |
| Normal Landing | Stabilized approach, touchdown within 400 ft of aim point, proper centerline tracking, smooth rollout. |
| Short-Field Landing | Approach at Vref, touchdown within 200 ft beyond a specified point, maximum braking applied. |
| Soft-Field Landing | Power through the flare, main gear touches first with minimal sink rate, hold nose off as long as possible. |
| Crosswind Landing | Proper wing-low (sideslip) or crab technique, aligned with centerline at touchdown, no drift. |
| Go-Around / Rejected Landing | Full power, carb heat off, flaps incrementally, positive climb before retracting, fly the pattern. |
Crosswind landings are a frequent weak point. Use our crosswind calculator to understand the crosswind component for the runway you will be using on checkride day.
6. ACS / PTS Standards
The Airman Certification Standards (ACS) define exactly what you must demonstrate on the checkride. The ACS replaced the older Practical Test Standards (PTS) and adds two critical dimensions beyond just skill: knowledge (what you know) and risk management (what decisions you make). Each task in the ACS lists specific knowledge elements, risk management considerations, and skill tolerances.
The DPE evaluates you against these standards. They are published and freely available on the FAA website. You should download the ACS for your specific certificate and study it. Knowing the exact tolerances gives you a clear target for every maneuver.
Key ACS Tolerances (Private Pilot)
| Parameter | Tolerance |
|---|---|
| Altitude | +/- 100 feet |
| Heading | +/- 10 degrees |
| Airspeed | +/- 10 knots |
| Bank Angle (steep turns) | +/- 5 degrees from 45 |
| Tracking (VOR/GPS) | +/- 3/4 scale deflection |
| Touchdown Point (normal) | Within 400 ft of aim point |
| Touchdown Point (short-field) | Within 200 ft beyond point |
| Glide Speed (emergency) | +/- 10 knots of best glide |
Important: these are maximum deviations, not targets. The DPE is looking at the overall quality of your flying. Consistently riding the edge of tolerances suggests you are not fully proficient. Aim for the center of each standard, and treat the tolerances as a safety net, not a goal.
7. Common Reasons for Failing
The national first-attempt pass rate for private pilot checkrides is roughly 75-80%. That means 1 in 5 applicants fail on their first try. Here are the most common reasons, and how to avoid them.
1. Poor cross-country planning
DPEs say incomplete or inaccurate XC planning is the number one oral exam failure. Missing NOTAMS, wrong fuel calculations, or inability to explain route decisions will end the checkride early.
How to avoid it: Plan your cross-country multiple times before the checkride. Use your Weight & Balance tool, check NOTAMs the morning of, and be ready to explain every decision.
2. Exceeding ACS tolerances on maneuvers
Busting altitude by more than 100 feet during steep turns, or landing long on a short-field attempt. One busted tolerance does not always mean a failure, but repeated deviations will.
How to avoid it: Practice each maneuver to half the ACS tolerance. If the standard is +/-100 ft, aim for +/-50 ft. Build a margin so stress does not push you out of standards.
3. Failure to maintain situational awareness
Getting lost on the cross-country, losing track of position relative to airspace, or failing to identify traffic. DPEs watch for heads-down fixation.
How to avoid it: Fly the cross-country route before the checkride. Use pilotage and dead reckoning, not just GPS. Call out airspace transitions and traffic proactively.
4. Improper emergency procedures
Freezing during a simulated engine failure, forgetting to establish best glide speed, or picking an unsuitable landing site.
How to avoid it: Chair-fly engine failure scenarios daily in the week before. Memorize best glide speed and the emergency checklist flow. Always have a landing option within gliding distance.
5. Go-around indecision
Continuing an unstabilized approach instead of going around. DPEs want to see you make the call, not ride a bad approach to the ground.
How to avoid it: If anything feels wrong below 500 AGL -- go around. DPEs will never fail you for executing a safe go-around. They will fail you for forcing a bad landing.
8. How to Find a DPE
Finding an available DPE can be one of the most frustrating parts of the checkride process. In many parts of the country, DPEs are booked 4-8 weeks out. Here is how to navigate the system.
Ask your CFI and flight school first. They will have a list of DPEs they work with regularly. A DPE who is familiar with your airport and training area can make the experience smoother.
Contact your local FSDO. The Flight Standards District Office maintains the official list of designated examiners for your area. You can call them directly or search the FAA Designee Management System online.
Be flexible on location. If your local DPEs are booked out for months, consider traveling to a DPE in a less busy area. Some applicants fly 1-2 hours to a DPE with shorter wait times. Factor in the aircraft rental and fuel costs when making this decision.
Expect to pay $500-$900. DPE fees vary by certificate, rating, and region. The fee is paid directly to the DPE, usually on the day of the checkride. Some require payment in advance. This is separate from aircraft rental, fuel, and your flight school's fees. If you fail and need a retest, you will pay the DPE fee again (often a reduced rate for retests -- typically 50-75% of the original fee).
Schedule early. Once your CFI says you are within a few weeks of being checkride-ready, start reaching out to DPEs. Canceling or rescheduling is much easier than trying to book a last-minute appointment.
9. Checkride Day Tips
You have put in the training hours, passed your written exam, and your CFI has endorsed you. Here are ten practical tips to help you perform your best on the big day.
Get a full night of sleep. Fatigue degrades judgment, motor skills, and recall.
Arrive at the airport 90 minutes early. Preflight the aircraft thoroughly and have all paperwork organized.
Get a full weather briefing from 1800wxbrief.com or ForeFlight. Print it out and bring it.
Check NOTAMs for your departure airport, destination, and alternates.
Chair-fly every maneuver the night before. Visualize the steps, speeds, and callouts.
Eat a proper meal before the checkride. Low blood sugar causes brain fog.
Treat the DPE like a passenger. Brief them on safety items, seatbelt, door, fire extinguisher.
If you do not know an answer during the oral, say so honestly. Then explain how you would find the answer (AIM, FAR, POH).
Fly the airplane first, talk second. Aviate, navigate, communicate -- in that order.
If you make a mistake, acknowledge it, correct it, and move on. DPEs expect imperfection; they are evaluating your judgment and decision-making.
10. What Happens if You Fail?
If you do not meet the ACS standards, the DPE will issue a Notice of Disapproval (commonly called a "pink slip"). This is documented on FAA Form 8060-5 and specifies exactly which task areas were unsatisfactory. It is not the end of the world -- it is a clearly defined path to your next attempt.
Under 14 CFR 61.43, you may apply for a retest after receiving additional training from an authorized instructor in the specific areas identified on the Notice of Disapproval. Your CFI must provide a new logbook endorsement certifying you are proficient in those areas. The retest covers only the failed areas, not the entire checkride.
There is no mandatory waiting period. You can retest as soon as you and your CFI feel you are ready and you can schedule with a DPE (who can be the same examiner or a different one). Most applicants retest within 1-3 weeks.
A failure stays on your record but it does not prevent you from getting any certificate or being hired by an airline. Airlines are far more interested in what you learned from the failure than the fact it happened. Many successful airline captains have one or more checkride failures in their history.
The key is to debrief thoroughly with your CFI, identify exactly what went wrong, train specifically on those areas, and come back prepared. Most retest applicants pass on their second attempt.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
How many times can you fail a checkride?
Can you record your checkride?
What happens if weather cancels my checkride?
How do I find a DPE?
Do I need a current medical certificate for the checkride?
How much does a checkride cost?
How long does a checkride take?
What is the checkride pass rate?
Can a DPE fail you for one mistake?
What is the difference between ACS and PTS?
Related Resources
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How to Become a Pilot
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Private Pilot Resources
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Instrument Rating Guide
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