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Flight School: Part 61 vs. Part 141

By Lane Wallace / Published: Feb 17, 2010
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Ed. Note: In this new "Flight School" department, we will provide various kinds of information pertaining to flight schools and flight training: news items, rule changes and answers to questions students may have about obtaining flight training. If you have any questions you would like to see answered here, write us at edit@flyingmag.com.

One of the most basic questions any potential flight student s has is what kind of school to attend. Some schools advertise their "Part 141" status, but exactly what that means is rarely clarified. Below — courtesy of Eric Radtke, president, and Paul Jurgens, a chief instructor and vice president of publications, of Sporty's Academy — is the clearest explanation I've come across that lays out the difference between Part 61 and Part 141 flight training, and the potential advantages and disadvantages of each.

Part 61 vs. Part 141 Flight Training:
When a flight school talks about training under Part 61 or being a Part 141 approved school, it is talking about the federal regulations under which it has the authority to train pilots. Both sets of regulations define minimum requirements for pilot training and certification.

Any FAA-approved flight instructor, whether associated with a flight school or not, may train a student under Part 61 regulations.

Part 141 regulations are related to the structure and approval of flight schools. Training under Part 141 regulations is permitted only by instructors associated with an FAA-approved flight school. In order to become approved, a flight school must meet certain requirements and submit each curriculum it wishes to have approved to the FAA for review. Part 141 approved schools are subject to regular surveillance audits by the FAA and must meet minimum pass rates on the practical exams.

Both methods of flight training require the student to meet the same standard of performance in order to obtain a pilot certificate. Where the methods differ is in rigidity and in some minimum requirements.

Ultimately, the way a student learns and his or her long-term goals may be the best criteria for deciding the regulations under which to train. After making that determination, the student needs to find the best fit among the choices within the preferred regulations. Both excellent and inferior flight instruction may be found under both sets of regulations.

The table below describes some of the potential advantages and disadvantages for the training regulations. It may be noted that some criteria can be both, depending on the student's training goals.

In short, either type of school teaches to the same requirements. A Part 141 school is particularly focused and perhaps better for a full-time student whose goal is a professional career. A Part 61 school is more flexible. So the important thing is to pick whichever one fits your schedule and flight goals better.

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Anonymous's picture

That makes everything clear. Thanks.

jbkalla's picture

The main reason I'm looking for Part 141 training is so I can use the Post 9/11 GI Bill for it. The VA won't pay for Part 61 training.

Airwomancfi's picture

Part 61 schools associated with colleges can use VA Post 9/11 GI benefits for flight training.

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