Learning to Fly a Powered Parachute
Sport Pilot Training
You will be able to earn your Sport Pilot Certificate in
only about twelve hours of instruction, and this certificate offers you the
privilege of carrying a passenger.
Click here for training prices.
The sport pilot certificate was created by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
specifically to address the desire of individuals wishing to fly
aircraft primarily for recreational purposes. A sport pilot may only
operate an aircraft during daylight hours (civil twilight).
Our full-time Certified Flight Instructor is available to provide you with the professional flight
training required to obtain your certificate.
The requirements to earn a pilot certificate in this category are
aimed at teaching the core knowledge that individuals must understand
and demonstrate in order to safely operate in the airspace system. By
passing a knowledge (written) and practical (flight) test, a
prospective sport pilot will demonstrate the proficiency necessary to
operate a variety of aircraft safely.
Sport pilots will be limited to operating aircraft that meet the
definition of Light Sport. That includes aircraft in the following
categories:
• Airplanes (single-engine only)
• Gliders
• Lighter-than-air ships (airship or balloon)
• Rotorcraft (gyroplane only)
• Powered Parachutes
• Weight-Shift control aircraft (e.g. trikes)
A sport pilot applicant must:
• Be a minimum of 16 years of age to become a student sport pilot
(14 for glider)
• Be 17 years of age before testing for a sport pilot certificate
(16 for gliders).
• Be able to read, write, and understand the English language.
• Hold either a valid airman's medical or a valid U.S. driver's
license as evidence of medical eligibility (provided you do not have
an official denial or revocation of medical eligibility on file with
FAA).
Medical Certification
To obtain a sport pilot certificate you must have either an FAA
airman medical certificate or a current and valid U.S. driver's
license issued by a state, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, a
territory, a possession, or the Federal government, provided you do
not have an official denial or revocation of medical eligibility on
file with FAA.
You then must comply with the restrictions placed on whichever
method you choose. For example, if you choose to use your driver's
license as your medical certificate, you must comply with all
restrictions on that license. In addition, and this is very important,
you must not act as a pilot- in-command of an aircraft if you know or
have reason to know of any medical condition that would make you
unable to operate the aircraft in a safe manner.
However, a pilot who has had his or her last medical "denied" or
"revoked" by FAA will be required to obtain a special issuance medical
(or alternative evidence of medical eligibility under a separate
procedure being developed by FAA) before being allowed to base his or
her medical fitness solely on driver's license requirements.
Restrictions On a Sport Pilot Certificate
• No flights into Class A airspace, which is at or over 18,000' MSL;
• No flights into Class B, C, or D airspace unless you receive
training and a logbook endorsement;
• No flights outside the U.S. without advance permission from that
country
• No sightseeing flights with passengers for charity fund raisers;
• No flights above 10,000' MSL;
• Daytime flight only; no night flights
• No flights when the flight or surface visibility is less than 3
statute miles;
• No flights unless you can see the surface of the earth for flight
reference;
• No flights if the operating limitations issued with the aircraft
do not permit that activity;
• No flights contrary to any limitation listed on the pilot's
certificate, U.S. driver's license, FAA medical certificate, or
logbook endorsement(s).
• No flights while carrying a passenger or property for
compensation or hire (no commercial operations);
• No renting a light-sport aircraft unless it was issued a
"special" airworthiness certificate;
any qualified and current pilot (recreational pilot or higher) may
fly a light-sport aircraft;
• A light-sport aircraft may be flown at night if it is properly
equipped for night flight and flown by a individual with a private
pilot (or higher) certificate who has a current and valid FAA airman's
medical certificate.
How will it make flying easier/more hassle-free for me?
New pilots seeking a sport pilot certificate will be able to learn
how to fly powered aircraft (fixed-wing airplanes, weight-shift trikes,
powered parachutes, gyroplanes, or airships) in as little as 12 hours
of flight instruction, saving both time and money. (Note: Your flight
instructor will make the final determination as to your readiness to
take a practical flight exam.)
Student pilots currently working on a private pilot certificate
will be able to apply their training toward a sport pilot certificate
and operate under sport pilot privileges until such time as they
choose to complete the requirements for a private pilot rating. All
time logged as a sport pilot can be applied toward higher ratings.
Private pilots or higher with a current medical certificate and
flight review can fly any light-sport aircraft in the categories and
classes for which they are rated, creating more opportunities for them
to own or rent light-sport aircraft.
Private pilots or higher may also choose to exercise the privileges
of a sport pilot and operate any sport-pilot eligible aircraft in the
categories or classes in which they are rated using their valid
driver's license or third-class medical as their medical
certification.
If I become a sport pilot, what can I fly?
An aircraft that meets the definition of a light-sport aircraft may
hold an airworthiness certificate in any one of the following
categories of FAA certification:
• An experimental aircraft, including amateur-built aircraft, for
which the owner must construct more than 51-percent of the aircraft.
• A Standard category aircraft; that is, a ready-to-fly aircraft
that is type-certificated in accordance with FAR Part 43.
• A Primary category aircraft; that is, a ready-to-fly aircraft
that is type-certificated in accordance with Primary category
regulations.
• A special light-sport aircraft
• An experimental light-sport aircraft.
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