PPL Written Test Study Guide 2026 — Complete Preparation Plan
How to Pass the FAA Private Pilot Written Test in 2026
The FAA Private Pilot Knowledge Test (PAR) is the first major milestone on your journey to becoming a pilot. It is a 60-question, multiple-choice exam administered at PSI testing centers. You need a score of 70% to pass, but you should aim for 85% or higher -- your DPE will scrutinize any missed topics during your oral exam.
This guide gives you the exact subjects you need to study, a proven 30-day study plan, the best free and paid resources, and sample questions so you know what to expect on test day.
All PPL Written Test Subjects and Their Weight
The FAA draws questions from a published test bank. Not every subject carries equal weight. Here is the breakdown based on the current Airman Knowledge Testing Supplement:
| Subject Area | Approximate Weight | Number of Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Regulations (14 CFR Part 61, 91) | 12% | ~7 |
| Aerodynamics & Principles of Flight | 10% | ~6 |
| Aircraft Systems | 8% | ~5 |
| Weather Theory & Services | 15% | ~9 |
| Performance & Weight and Balance | 12% | ~7 |
| Navigation (Pilotage, Dead Reckoning, VOR) | 12% | ~7 |
| Cross-Country Flight Planning | 10% | ~6 |
| Airport Operations & ATC | 8% | ~5 |
| Aeromedical Factors | 5% | ~3 |
| Night Operations | 4% | ~3 |
| Emergency Procedures | 4% | ~2 |
Key Takeaway
Weather, regulations, performance, and navigation together make up roughly half the exam. If you master these four areas, you are already in a strong position.
The 30-Day PPL Written Test Study Plan
This plan assumes you can dedicate 1.5 to 2 hours per day. If you have more time, you can compress it. If you have less, extend to 45 days.
Week 1: Foundations (Days 1-7)
| Day | Topic | Study Method |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Regulations -- pilot certificates, medical requirements, currency | Read 14 CFR Part 61 summary, take 20-question practice quiz |
| 2 | Regulations -- airspace classes, VFR minimums, right-of-way | Memorize airspace chart, practice quiz |
| 3 | Aerodynamics -- four forces, angle of attack, stalls | Read Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (PHAK) Ch. 5 |
| 4 | Aerodynamics -- stability, load factor, ground effect | PHAK Ch. 5 continued, practice quiz |
| 5 | Aircraft Systems -- engine, electrical, fuel, pitot-static | PHAK Ch. 7, draw system diagrams |
| 6 | Aircraft Systems -- flight instruments, gyroscopic instruments | PHAK Ch. 8, practice quiz |
| 7 | Week 1 Review | 60-question full practice test, review all missed questions |
Week 2: Weather and Performance (Days 8-14)
| Day | Topic | Study Method |
|---|---|---|
| 8 | Weather theory -- atmosphere, pressure, fronts | Aviation Weather (AC 00-6B) Ch. 1-4 |
| 9 | Weather theory -- clouds, thunderstorms, icing, fog | AC 00-6B Ch. 5-8, practice quiz |
| 10 | Weather services -- METARs, TAFs, PIREPs | Decode 10 real METARs and TAFs |
| 11 | Weather services -- prog charts, AIRMETs, SIGMETs | Read Aviation Weather Services (AC 00-45H) |
| 12 | Performance -- density altitude, takeoff/landing charts | PHAK Ch. 11, work 10 chart problems |
| 13 | Weight and balance -- CG calculations, loading graphs | Work 10 W&B problems from the FAA supplement |
| 14 | Week 2 Review | 60-question full practice test, focus on weather and performance |
Week 3: Navigation and Operations (Days 15-21)
| Day | Topic | Study Method |
|---|---|---|
| 15 | Navigation -- sectional charts, symbols, airspace | Study a real sectional chart for 60 minutes |
| 16 | Navigation -- VOR tracking, radials, CDI interpretation | Work 15 VOR problems |
| 17 | Cross-country planning -- flight plan form, fuel calculations | Plan a mock 200nm cross-country |
| 18 | Cross-country planning -- E6B or electronic flight computer | Work time/speed/distance/fuel problems |
| 19 | Airport operations -- runway markings, lighting, NOTAMs | AIM Ch. 2, practice quiz |
| 20 | ATC communications -- radio procedures, transponder codes | AIM Ch. 4, listen to LiveATC for 30 minutes |
| 21 | Week 3 Review | 60-question full practice test, review all navigation questions |
Week 4: Final Review and Test Prep (Days 22-30)
| Day | Topic | Study Method |
|---|---|---|
| 22 | Aeromedical factors -- hypoxia, spatial disorientation, alcohol | PHAK Ch. 17, practice quiz |
| 23 | Night operations -- night vision, lighting, illusions | PHAK Ch. 17, practice quiz |
| 24 | Emergency procedures -- engine failure, lost procedures, ELT | PHAK Ch. 17, practice quiz |
| 25 | Weak areas -- revisit any topics below 80% on practice tests | Targeted practice quizzes |
| 26 | Full practice test #1 | Simulate test conditions (2.5 hours, no interruptions) |
| 27 | Review missed questions from test #1 | Deep dive into every wrong answer |
| 28 | Full practice test #2 | Target 85%+ |
| 29 | Review missed questions from test #2 | Final weak spots |
| 30 | Light review + logistics | Schedule your PSI test, gather required documents |
Best Resources for PPL Written Test Prep
Free Resources
- FAA Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge (PHAK) -- The official FAA textbook. Free PDF from faa.gov. Covers everything on the test.
- FAA Airplane Flying Handbook -- Focuses on maneuvers and procedures. Free PDF from faa.gov.
- Aviation Weather (AC 00-6B) -- The FAA's official weather reference. Essential for the 15% weather portion.
- FAA Knowledge Test Supplement -- Contains the actual figures, charts, and tables used on the exam. Study this cover to cover.
- LiveATC.net -- Listen to real ATC communications to reinforce radio procedures.
Paid Resources
- Rotate Pilot ($7.49/mo with PILOT50) -- 1,800+ FAA practice questions with AI explanations, adaptive quizzes, and progress tracking. Covers all PPL subjects.
- ASA Prepware -- Another popular test prep option with practice questions.
- Sporty's Study Buddy -- Mobile-friendly question bank.
- King Schools -- Video-based ground school if you prefer lecture-style learning.
Sample Questions by Topic
Test yourself with these representative questions from each major subject area:
Regulations
Q: A recreational pilot with fewer than 400 flight hours must carry what document to act as PIC?
A) A valid driver's license
B) A logbook with an endorsement from an authorized instructor for the make and model
C) A certified copy of the pilot certificate
*Answer: B -- Per 14 CFR 61.101(g), recreational pilots with fewer than 400 hours must have a logbook endorsement.*
Weather
Q: Which weather phenomenon is always associated with a thunderstorm?
A) Hail
B) Lightning
C) Tornado
*Answer: B -- Every thunderstorm produces lightning by definition. Hail and tornadoes are common but not guaranteed.*
Navigation
Q: When flying VFR on a magnetic course of 180 to 359 degrees, what is the appropriate cruising altitude?
A) Even thousands plus 500 feet (e.g., 4,500, 6,500)
B) Odd thousands plus 500 feet (e.g., 3,500, 5,500)
C) Any altitude above 3,000 feet AGL
*Answer: A -- Per 14 CFR 91.159, magnetic courses 180-359 use even thousands plus 500 feet.*
Performance
Q: What effect does high density altitude have on aircraft performance?
A) Increased rate of climb and shorter takeoff distance
B) Decreased rate of climb and longer takeoff distance
C) No effect on normally aspirated engines
*Answer: B -- High density altitude means thinner air, which reduces engine power and wing lift, degrading all performance metrics.*
Weight and Balance
Q: If the computed CG is forward of the forward CG limit, what is the most likely effect?
A) The aircraft will be difficult to rotate on takeoff and require higher approach speeds
B) The aircraft will be unstable in pitch
C) There will be no noticeable effect during normal flight
*Answer: A -- Forward CG increases longitudinal stability excessively, requiring more elevator authority and higher speeds.*
Test Day Tips
- Bring two forms of ID -- One must be government-issued photo ID. The second can be a credit card with your name.
- Arrive 30 minutes early -- PSI centers require check-in time.
- You get 2 hours 30 minutes -- That is plenty. Do not rush.
- Use the scratch paper -- The testing center provides paper and a basic calculator. Use them for W&B and performance problems.
- Mark and skip -- If a question stumps you, flag it and move on. Come back to flagged questions after finishing the rest.
- Read every answer choice -- The FAA loves plausible-sounding wrong answers. Read all three options before selecting.
What Happens After You Pass
When you pass, PSI gives you a printed score report called the Airman Knowledge Test Report (AKTR). This report is valid for 24 calendar months. You will give it to your DPE (Designated Pilot Examiner) when you take your practical test (checkride).
Your DPE will review your AKTR and focus oral exam questions on the subject codes where you missed questions. This is why scoring 85%+ matters -- fewer missed codes means a smoother oral exam.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many questions are on the PPL written test?
The FAA Private Pilot Knowledge Test has 60 multiple-choice questions. You need to answer at least 42 correctly (70%) to pass. The test is drawn from a bank of approximately 900 questions.
How long is the PPL written test valid?
Your passing score is valid for 24 calendar months. If you do not take your checkride within that window, you will need to retake the written test.
Can I retake the PPL written test if I fail?
Yes. After a failed attempt, you must receive additional ground training from an authorized instructor and get an endorsement before retesting. There is a 14-day waiting period between attempts.
How much does the PPL written test cost?
The test fee at PSI testing centers is currently $175. Some flight schools include this in their training package.
Should I study the actual FAA question bank?
The FAA retired the publicly available question bank in 2014. Modern test prep tools like Rotate use questions modeled on the current test bank with verified explanations. Studying from an outdated question bank can hurt you because the FAA regularly updates questions.
What is the hardest subject on the PPL written test?
Most students struggle with weather services (decoding METARs, TAFs, and prog charts) and weight and balance calculations. These require practice with actual data rather than just memorization.
Start Studying Now
Every week you delay is a week further from your pilot certificate. The written test is the most predictable part of pilot training -- it is the same format every time, the subjects are published, and the passing score is achievable with consistent study.
Practice with real FAA questions -- [Start Free 3-Day Trial](/checkout?plan=monthly&coupon=PILOT50&focus=ppl)
*Read more: [Is a pilot certificate worth it?](/blog/why-flight-schools-are-a-scam) | [Free PPL practice test](/free-test) | [PPL study materials](/guides/private-pilot-license)*
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