A commercial pilot career in Europe is a decade-long ladder, not a one-year course. It begins the day you book your first trial lesson and continues through checkrides, line flying, command upgrades, and eventual retirement at sixty-five. The regulatory framework is clear — EASA Part-FCL spells out every hour, every exam, every rating — but how you sequence those milestones shapes how quickly and how affordably you reach the right seat of an airliner.
How long does it take to become a commercial pilot?
Integrated ATPL programs — sometimes called "zero-to-hero" — compress PPL, CPL, frozen ATPL theory, and multi-engine/instrument training into a structured 18–24 month full-time course. You live near the ATO, fly most days, and emerge with a frozen ATPL and roughly 200 flight hours. Modular training — the alternative path — lets you earn each rating separately while you work, typically over 3–5 years.
Integrated is faster and has a clearer airline-cadet pipeline; modular is cheaper, more flexible, and rewards self-motivated students who can manage their own progression. Neither path is inherently "better." Airlines in 2026 hire from both — the question in the selection interview is whether your logbook is clean and your competencies are current, not whether you attended an integrated school. Once you hold a frozen ATPL you still need to accumulate 1,500 total flight hours before the ATPL "unfreezes" and you can command a multi-crew aircraft. Airline first-officer roles generally cover those 1,500 hours within your first 2–4 years of line flying.
How much does commercial pilot training cost in Europe?
Integrated ATPL programs in Europe typically cost €80,000–€150,000, with the upper end at name-brand schools in the UK, Ireland, and Scandinavia. Modular routes, flown flexibly through any accredited EASA ATO, can come in at €50,000–€80,000 if you manage aircraft rental and instructor time carefully. Both numbers exclude two significant post-course costs: the type rating for your first jet (€15,000–€30,000, often paid by the airline via a bonded contract) and the cost of staying current — rated, medical, logbook, recurrent training — while you wait for a first job.
Airline cadet programs from Lufthansa, British Airways, Ryanair, easyJet, Wizz Air, and a handful of national flag carriers offer subsidised or financed training in exchange for a bonded commitment to the airline. Competition is intense — thousands of applicants per intake — but for those who secure a slot, cadet programs flatten the upfront financial barrier and deliver a job offer on graduation.
What medical certificate do I need for commercial flying?
Class 1 medical certification is the non-negotiable gate between recreational and professional flying. You must hold a valid Class 1 before you begin integrated CPL/ATPL training, before you fly solo in the commercial syllabus, and before every line flight for the rest of your career. The initial Class 1 exam is substantially more detailed than the Class 2 used for a PPL — extended cardiovascular testing, detailed ophthalmological assessment, blood chemistry panel, and a formal chest X-ray, usually at a specialist aero-medical centre rather than a local AME's office.
Validity is 12 months under age 60 and 6 months from age 60 onwards. Renewals are routine for healthy pilots and cover a subset of the initial exam. A condition that looks disqualifying on paper (controlled hypertension, corrected vision beyond the old thresholds, a history of kidney stones) is rarely an absolute bar — the Class 1 framework explicitly accommodates individual medical assessments and operational limitations. Speak to a senior AME before assuming a condition ends your career.
Can I get hired by an airline straight out of school?
Yes, and most graduates of a structured cadet programme do. Airlines recruit first officers on regional turboprop fleets (ATR, Dash 8), narrow-body short-haul jets (A320, 737), and increasingly directly onto wide-body fleets for the larger flag carriers. Your first job will be almost entirely line flying — sectors from your home base to European destinations, two to four rotations per day, building the 1,500 hours that unfreeze your ATPL.
Expect a bonded training contract for the initial type rating (typically 3 years) and a salary in the €35,000–€55,000 range for your first year at a budget carrier, scaling upward with fleet and hours. Captain upgrade typically comes 7–12 years into your career at most European carriers, at which point total compensation moves into the €100,000–€180,000 range depending on airline, fleet, and route structure.
Is a degree required to become an airline pilot?
No. EASA Part-FCL specifies flight hours, theoretical exams, and medical standards — it says nothing about academic degrees. Most European airlines do not require a university degree; a minority of flag carriers list one as "preferred" for their cadet programmes, usually satisfied by any bachelor-level qualification rather than a specific subject. Aviation management, aerospace engineering, physics, and meteorology are common among applicants, but business, languages, and liberal arts degrees appear just as often in hiring statistics.
What airlines consistently assess during selection are: mathematical and spatial reasoning under time pressure, English proficiency at ICAO Level 4 minimum (Level 5 or 6 for wide-body operations), teamwork and CRM judgement in simulator assessments, and medical fitness. Your logbook, your exam passes, your medical, and your interview performance matter far more than whether you hold a degree.
What's the difference between CPL and ATPL?
A Commercial Pilot License (CPL) lets you be paid to fly single-pilot aircraft — charter flights, aerial work, flight instruction, survey and utility operations. The ATPL (Airline Transport Pilot License) is required to act as pilot-in-command of a multi-crew aircraft like an A320 or 737. In practice, most pilots earn a "frozen ATPL" — the CPL plus completed ATPL theoretical knowledge exams plus a Multi-Crew Cooperation (MCC) course — and then unfreeze the ATPL once they have 1,500 total flight hours.
The frozen ATPL is what airlines hire. It signals that you are ready to operate at the airline theoretical standard and ready to be trained on a type rating for multi-crew operations, while leaving your final unfreezing tied to line flying experience. The regulatory framework governing all of this — CPL, ATPL, MCC, type ratings — sits inside EASA Part-FCL. If you plan to build a long European career, read the EASA regulations pillar so that the decisions you make at each step are informed by the rules, not by marketing from a particular school.