Part 135 vs Part 121: Pay and Lifestyle Compared
Charter vs Airline: Two Very Different Ways to Fly
The choice between Part 135 (on-demand charter) and Part 121 (scheduled airline) represents one of the most significant lifestyle decisions in a pilot's career.
Salary Comparison
Part 135 Pay (2026)
| Position | Aircraft Type | Year 1 | Year 10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light Jet Captain | Citation/Phenom | $80,000 | $130,000 |
| Mid-size Jet Captain | Challenger/Hawker | $100,000 | $170,000 |
| Large Cabin Captain | Gulfstream/Global | $130,000 | $230,000 |
| NetJets Captain | Mixed fleet | $140,000 | $240,000+ |
Part 121 Pay (2026)
| Position | Airline Type | Year 1 | Year 10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Regional FO | ERJ/CRJ | $68,000 | $110,000 |
| Major Airline FO | 737/A320 | $105,000 | $270,000 |
| Major Airline Captain | 737/A320 | $290,000 | $420,000 |
| Major Captain (Widebody) | 777/A350 | $350,000 | $510,000+ |
The Crossover Point
Part 135 pays more than regionals early on, but once a pilot reaches a major airline, Part 121 compensation far exceeds most Part 135 positions.
Schedule and Lifestyle
| Factor | Part 135 | Part 121 |
|---|---|---|
| Predictability | Low (on-call common) | High (bid schedules) |
| Days off/month | 8-15 | 12-18 |
| On-call/standby | Common | Limited to reserve |
| Night flying | Occasional | Common |
| International | Common (ad-hoc) | Structured routes |
| Weather pressure | Client pressure to go | Dispatch support |
Part 135 Pros
- Variety of destinations including private airstrips and resorts
- No passenger boarding delays
- FBO treatment with nicer facilities
- Multiple aircraft types and mission profiles
- Personal client relationships
Part 135 Cons
- Unpredictable schedule with late-night callouts
- Client pressure in marginal weather
- Smaller companies may have less robust safety culture
- Weaker benefits (retirement, health, insurance)
- Limited career progression beyond large cabin captain
Part 121 Pros
- Predictable monthly bid schedules
- Strong safety culture with dispatch support
- Union protection for pay and work rules
- Clear captain progression and widebody path
- Superior retirement and benefits
Part 121 Cons
- Junior pilots get worst schedules and bases
- Commuting culture
- Repetitive routes
- Boarding delays
- Less autonomy (strict SOPs)
Duty and Rest Rules
| Rule | Part 135 | Part 121 |
|---|---|---|
| Max flight time | 8-10 hours | 8-9 hours |
| Max duty period | 14 hours (day) | 9-14 hours |
| Minimum rest | 10 hours | 10 hours |
| Monthly limit | 120 hours | 100 hours |
Which Is Right for You?
Choose Part 135 If:
- You value destination variety and smaller aircraft
- You want to skip the regional airline phase
- You are comfortable with unpredictability
- You prioritize early-career income
Choose Part 121 If:
- You want maximum career earnings
- Schedule predictability matters to your family
- You want union protection and strong benefits
- You aspire to fly widebody aircraft internationally
The Hybrid Path
Some pilots fly Part 135 for 3-5 years, build turbine PIC time, then apply to major airlines. This skips regionals but trades early seniority at a major.
The Bottom Line
Both paths offer fulfilling careers with different tradeoffs. Part 135 provides adventure and variety. Part 121 provides structure, security, and the highest long-term compensation. Understanding your priorities is the key.
*Explore salary data for both paths with our [salary calculator](/tools/salary), or build your knowledge with our [ATPL question bank](/).*
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