A Private Pilot Licence (PPL) is an internationally recognised ICAO-compliant licence that allows you to fly single-engine piston aircraft as pilot-in-command, carrying passengers for non-commercial purposes under Visual Flight Rules (VFR). Under EASA Part-FCL, the PPL(A) permits you to fly aircraft registered in any EASA member state. You cannot be paid to fly — it is strictly for private, recreational, or personal transport. The PPL serves as the foundation for adding further ratings (night, instrument, multi-engine) and is the first step toward a commercial career. Minimum age for issue is 17.
Almost anyone can learn to fly. No special academic qualifications, physical fitness tests, or prior experience are required. You must be at least 16 to fly solo (17 to obtain the licence) and hold a valid Class 2 or LAPL medical certificate. Good coordination, spatial awareness, and multitasking ability are helpful but are developed during training. People of all ages, professions, and backgrounds successfully earn their PPL every year.
There is no upper age limit for obtaining or holding an EASA PPL. People in their 50s, 60s, and 70s regularly earn their PPL. The only requirement is maintaining a valid medical certificate. Class 2 medical renewals become annual after age 50. For private flying, there are no age-related privilege restrictions — the age-60/65 rules only apply to commercial air transport.
You can begin flight training at any age, though you must be at least 16 to fly solo and 17 to be issued the PPL. Many schools accept students from age 14-15 for dual instruction. Your medical certificate must be valid before first solo. Some countries require parental consent for minors.
No. There are no educational prerequisites for the EASA PPL. The theory exams cover aviation-specific subjects and do not require prior knowledge beyond basic secondary school level. For airline careers, some airlines may prefer a degree, but this is an employer preference, not a regulatory requirement.
A discovery flight (trial lesson) is a short flight of 20-60 minutes where you fly with an instructor and handle the controls. Most schools offer these for EUR100-250. Highly recommended before committing financially to a full PPL course. The time can often be logged toward your training hours.
EASA (European Union Aviation Safety Agency) regulates civil aviation safety across 31 states (all 27 EU members plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland). EASA sets pilot licensing rules through Part-FCL, which replaced JAR-FCL in 2012. A licence issued by any EASA member state is automatically valid in all others — train in Spain, fly in Germany, no conversion needed.
A licence (PPL, CPL, ATPL) establishes your core privileges as a pilot. A rating is an additional endorsement: class ratings (e.g., SEP) specify what aircraft you can fly, while additional ratings (night, IR, MEP) extend your operational privileges. You always need both a valid licence and valid ratings to fly.
Absolutely — most PPL students train part-time. You typically fly 1-3 times per week, with lessons on mornings, evenings, or weekends. At this pace, expect 6-12 months to complete. Consistency is key: gaps of several weeks lead to costly skill decay. Theory can be studied via distance learning in your own time.
For the PPL itself, EASA does not mandate English — exams and training can be in the national language. However, ICAO English Language Proficiency (ELP) at Level 4+ is required if you want to fly internationally, communicate with ATC in English, or obtain a Flight Radiotelephony Operator's Licence (FRTOL). In practice, most students obtain at least Level 4.
Instructional flying (flight training with an instructor) has an excellent safety record — approximately 2 fatal accidents per million flight hours, which is comparable to or safer than driving. Solo private flying after the PPL is riskier at approximately 16-21 fatal accidents per million hours — roughly 20x the driving rate per hour of exposure. However, per journey (rather than per hour), GA flying and driving are more comparable for typical trip distances. The critical point: the majority of GA accidents involve identifiable human errors (weather decisions, fuel management, loss of control) that are preventable through good training, currency, and personal discipline. A pilot who flies regularly, maintains conservative limits, and avoids classic risk scenarios faces much lower personal risk than the raw statistics suggest.
Frequently discussed on PPRuNe and Pilots of America. Red flags include: instructor frequently cancels or reschedules (lack of commitment), instructor is negative, condescending, or yells during lessons (damages learning), you don't feel your questions are welcome, instructor seems distracted or uninterested (probably a time-builder counting hours), no structured lesson plan or syllabus progression (winging it), instructor consistently extends lessons beyond your current level (potential hour-padding), or you simply don't feel you're progressing after 10+ hours. Good signs: clear lesson objectives and debriefs, patience with repeated questions, structured progression through the syllabus, genuine enthusiasm for teaching, and you feel your skills improving. Don't hesitate to switch instructors — it's your money and your safety.
Based on thousands of forum posts across Reddit, PPRuNe, and Pilots of America: (1) You will almost certainly need more than the minimum hours — budget for 55-65. (2) The quoted price rarely includes everything — ask for a full cost breakdown in writing. (3) Instructor turnover is high at many schools — ask about instructor retention. (4) Weather will cancel lessons, sometimes for weeks — this is normal. (5) The learning curve is not linear — you will have bad days and plateaus. (6) Get your medical FIRST before spending money on lessons. (7) The real cost isn't getting the PPL — it's flying after you get it. (8) You will need to study theory seriously, not just show up to fly. (9) Choosing an instructor matters more than choosing a school. (10) 'Anyone can learn to fly' is true, but not everyone will find it easy or enjoyable — and that's okay too.