Federal Aviation Administration regulations require a minimum of 40 hours of flight time for private pilot certification, including at least 20 hours of instruction with a certified flight instructor and 10 hours of supervised solo practice. Additional requirements include cross-country navigation training, night flying experience, and basic instrument flight skills.
Eligibility requires being at least 17 years old, demonstrating English language proficiency, and obtaining a third-class medical certificate from an FAA-authorized aviation medical examiner. The medical examination makes sure you meet the physical standards necessary for safe aircraft operation.
Dedicated students typically complete their training in 3-6 months, though we accommodate various schedules and learning paces. Some motivated students finish during concentrated periods in 8-10 weeks, while working professionals often prefer 6-9 month programs using evenings and weekends.
Ground instruction covers meteorology, federal aviation regulations, navigation principles, and aircraft systems. You'll master aeronautical chart interpretation, cross-country flight planning, and weather analysis. The FAA knowledge test consists of 60 multiple-choice questions, and our systematic preparation consistently produces scores well above national averages.
Flight training progresses from basic aircraft control through takeoffs, landings, emergency procedures, and cross-country navigation. Your solo flight - piloting the aircraft completely on your own - ranks among aviation's most memorable milestones. A recent student from near the Mission San Fernando described the experience as "the moment I truly understood what freedom feels like."