Returning to Flying After a Break — What You Need to Know

Taking a break from flying is more common than most pilots admit. Life happens — career changes, family commitments, financial constraints, or simply losing motivation. If you are reading this, you are probably thinking about getting back in the cockpit. Good news: it is absolutely possible, and you are not starting from scratch.

You Are Not Alone

Studies suggest that a significant percentage of private pilots become inactive within 5 years of getting their license. The reasons vary, but the path back is well-trodden.

Rotate was literally built by a pilot in this exact situation — someone who returned to aviation after a 6-year hiatus and found the study landscape had changed but the passion had not.

What You Have Not Lost

Before panicking about how much you have forgotten, remember:

  • Your license does not expire. PPL, CPL, and ATPL certificates are valid for life.
  • Muscle memory fades slowly. Basic flying skills come back faster than you think.
  • Your aeronautical decision-making has matured. Life experience makes you a safer pilot.
  • You have a knowledge foundation. You are reviewing, not learning from scratch.

What You Need to Address

1. Medical Certificate

If your medical has lapsed, get a new one before spending money on flight training. Requirements may have changed, and your health status may have changed.

For the US (FAA):

  • BasicMed may be an option if you are not flying commercially
  • Class 3 for private operations
  • Class 1/2 if pursuing commercial flying

2. Flight Review (BFR/Proficiency Check)

  • FAA: Flight Review (formerly BFR) every 24 calendar months — 1 hour ground, 1 hour flight minimum
  • EASA: Proficiency check or recency requirements
  • DGAC: Similar recency and proficiency requirements

If it has been years since your last flight, budget for 5-10 hours of dual instruction before attempting a flight review.

3. Knowledge Rust

The areas that fade fastest:

  • Airspace regulations (they may have literally changed)
  • Weather interpretation
  • Radio communications phraseology
  • Emergency procedures
  • Navigation technology (GPS has evolved significantly)

The areas that stay:

  • Basic aerodynamics
  • General aircraft knowledge
  • Fundamental flight maneuvers (once you are back in the air)

4. Technology Changes

Depending on how long you have been away:

  • Glass cockpits are now standard in many training aircraft
  • ADS-B is required in most controlled airspace
  • GPS approaches have largely replaced NDB approaches
  • Electronic flight bags have replaced paper charts
  • TFRs and airspace changes may affect areas you used to fly

A Structured Return Plan

Month 1: Ground Study

  • Review current regulations (FARs/ANOs have been updated)
  • Study current charts for your local area
  • Review weather theory and products
  • Take online quizzes to assess your knowledge baseline
  • Use Rotate to structure your review across all subjects

Month 2: Dual Flight Training

  • Schedule 2-3 flights per week with an instructor
  • Start with basic air work: stalls, steep turns, slow flight
  • Progress to pattern work and landings
  • Add cross-country and instrument work (if rated)
  • Complete your flight review

Month 3: Building Confidence

  • Solo flights in familiar areas
  • Short cross-country flights
  • Gradually expand your operating area
  • Join a flying club for social support and shared costs

Tips for a Successful Return

1. Be Honest About Your Skill Level

Tell your instructor exactly how long it has been. There is no shame in being rusty — only in pretending you are not.

2. Start Slow

Do not try to fly a cross-country on your first flight back. Start with basic maneuvers in the practice area.

3. Budget Realistically

Plan for 10-15 hours of dual instruction, not the minimum 1 hour. Your wallet will thank your future self.

4. Study Before You Fly

Every hour of ground study saves money in the air. Review procedures, checklists, and airspace before each flight.

5. Find a Supportive Community

Other returning pilots understand what you are going through. Online forums, local flying clubs, and platforms like Rotate connect you with people on the same journey.

6. Set Realistic Goals

You will not be as sharp as you were on your best day — at first. Give yourself grace and celebrate progress.

The Cost of Coming Back

Expect to spend $3,000 - $8,000 on flight training to get back to comfortable solo flying. This varies based on:

  • How long you have been away
  • Your previous experience level
  • Aircraft rental rates in your area
  • How quickly skills return (varies by individual)

The knowledge portion can be refreshed for free or at minimal cost using study platforms, significantly reducing the total investment.

Start Your Comeback Today

The hardest part of returning to flying is making the decision to start. The theory review can begin right now, from your couch, at no cost. Rotate offers free access to aviation theory content that will help you identify what you remember and what needs work — before you spend a dollar on flight time.