Instrument Rating Checkride Tips 2026: Pass First Time
Everything You Need to Pass the Instrument Checkride
The instrument rating checkride is a pivotal moment in every pilot's career. It transforms you from a fair-weather flyer into a pilot who can operate in the clouds, shoot approaches to minimums, and navigate the IFR system with confidence. It is also one of the most failed checkrides, with a national disapproval rate of approximately 20-25%.
This guide covers exactly what DPEs are looking for in 2026 and how to exceed their expectations.
The Oral Exam: What to Expect
The oral portion typically lasts 1.5 to 2.5 hours and covers these major areas:
Weather Analysis
DPEs will present you with a real or simulated weather scenario and expect you to:
- Interpret METARs, TAFs, AIRMETs, SIGMETs, and PIREPs
- Identify hazards including icing, turbulence, thunderstorms, and low IFR conditions
- Make a go/no-go decision and explain your reasoning
- Describe your personal minimums and how they differ from published minimums
Regulations and Procedures
| Topic | Key Points to Know |
|---|---|
| Currency requirements | 6 approaches, holding, tracking in 6 months (66 HIT) |
| Required instruments | GRABCARD for IFR flight |
| Alternate airport requirements | 1-2-3 rule (1 hour before/after, 600-2 or 800-2) |
| Lost communication procedures | MEA, expected, filed, vectored |
| Minimum altitudes | MEA, MOCA, MRA, MCA, OROCA |
Approach Procedures
Be prepared to brief any approach plate in detail:
- Identify all components (feeder routes, initial approach fix, intermediate segment, final approach course, MAP, missed approach)
- Explain the difference between precision and non-precision approaches
- Describe step-down fixes and their purpose
- Explain circling approach criteria and limitations
- Brief the missed approach procedure from memory after reviewing the plate
Aircraft Systems
Know your specific aircraft's:
- Pitot-static system and how failures affect instruments
- Vacuum system and what fails if it is lost
- Electrical system and load shedding procedures
- GPS and its limitations (RAIM, database currency)
- Autopilot operation and disconnect procedures
The Flight Test: Maneuvers and Standards
Pre-Flight and Departure
- File and open an IFR flight plan (or simulate the process)
- Perform a thorough instrument cockpit check
- Brief the departure procedure and initial routing
- Demonstrate proper IFR communication from the ground up
En Route Navigation
| Maneuver | ACS Standard | Common Errors |
|---|---|---|
| Tracking a VOR radial | Within 1 dot CDI deflection | Chasing the needle |
| GPS direct navigation | Maintain desired track within limits | Incorrect waypoint selection |
| Holding pattern entry | Correct entry type, standard/non-standard | Wrong entry procedure |
| Holding pattern flying | Altitude +/- 100 ft, timing +/- 15 sec | Wind correction |
| Unusual attitude recovery | Prompt recognition and recovery | Over-controlling |
Approaches
You will fly a minimum of three approaches:
- Precision approach (ILS): Maintain glideslope and localizer within 1 dot. Go missed at DA/DH if simulated IMC.
- Non-precision approach (VOR or LNAV): Step down at appropriate fixes. Do not descend below MDA until runway environment in sight.
- GPS approach (or second non-precision): Demonstrate proficiency with GPS navigation and approach modes.
Standards for All Approaches
- Airspeed: +/- 10 knots
- Heading: +/- 10 degrees
- Altitude: +/- 100 feet (en route), +/- 75 feet on glideslope
- CDI deflection: Within 3/4 scale during approach
- Missed approach: Execute promptly at the MAP or DA
Circling Approach
Many DPEs include a circling approach to test:
- Maintaining visual contact with the runway
- Staying within protected airspace
- Configuring for landing while maneuvering
- Going missed from the circling maneuver
Missed Approach
Every missed approach should be flown as if it were real:
- Power, attitude, configuration (positive rate, gear up, flaps up)
- Climb to the published altitude
- Navigate to the holding fix
- Enter the hold correctly
Top 10 Checkride Failures
Based on DPE reports, these are the most common reasons for failing the instrument checkride:
- Altitude deviations during holding -- Practice holding in turbulent conditions
- Incorrect holding entry -- Draw the holding pattern and determine entry type before reaching the fix
- Descending below MDA on non-precision approach -- Set your altitude bug and do not go below it
- Failure to execute missed approach at the MAP -- Know exactly where your MAP is before starting the approach
- Poor weather briefing during oral -- Practice real weather briefings daily in the weeks before your checkride
- Inadequate knowledge of lost communication procedures -- AVE-F MEA: Assigned, Vectored, Expected, Filed; Minimum, Expected, Altitude
- Busting approach speed limits -- Know the maximum speed for your approach category
- Forgetting to identify navigation aids -- Always identify the VOR or NDB before using it
- Poor partial panel skills -- Practice unusual attitudes and approaches on partial panel regularly
- Rushing the approach brief -- Take your time. A thorough brief prevents errors during the approach.
Two-Week Checkride Prep Plan
| Day | Activity |
|---|---|
| Day 1-3 | Review all ACS standards. Identify weak areas from training records. |
| Day 4-5 | Chair fly all approaches at your home airport and nearby fields. |
| Day 6-7 | Fly practice session focusing on holds and non-precision approaches. |
| Day 8-9 | Full mock checkride with your instructor (oral and flight). |
| Day 10-11 | Address weaknesses identified in mock checkride. |
| Day 12 | Fly a relaxed practice session. No new maneuvers. Build confidence. |
| Day 13 | Review notes, brief approaches, prepare documents and aircraft. |
| Day 14 | Checkride day. Arrive early, be organized, fly like you trained. |
Checkride Day Tips
Before You Arrive
- Ensure all aircraft documents are in order (AROW)
- Verify aircraft maintenance and airworthiness
- Check weather and file a flight plan if required
- Organize your approach plates and charts
- Bring your logbook, knowledge test results, endorsements, and medical
During the Oral
- If you do not know an answer, say so. Then explain how you would find it.
- Use your resources (FAR/AIM, approach plates) to support your answers
- Relate answers to practical scenarios when possible
- Stay calm and conversational. This is a discussion, not an interrogation.
During the Flight
- Brief every approach out loud, even if the DPE does not ask
- Call out altitudes, speeds, and configurations during approach
- If something goes wrong, communicate. Tell the DPE what you are doing and why.
- Fly the airplane first. Aviate, navigate, communicate -- in that order.
The Bottom Line
The instrument checkride tests whether you can safely operate in the IFR environment. DPEs are not looking for perfection -- they are looking for competence, good judgment, and the ability to manage workload. Fly the way you trained, use your checklists, and communicate clearly.
*Sharpen your instrument knowledge with our [question bank](/tools/quiz) featuring hundreds of IFR-related questions, or review our [navigation guides](/guides) for in-depth coverage of approach procedures and IFR operations.*
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