They're expensive, I think a pilot I fly with is still trying to pay off the loans.I have a 30 year old female friend that wants to become a professional pilot with the airlines. She is looking at ATP Flight School.
Anyone have any experience with ATP?
For that kind of money, I’d buy a TAA Archer or 172 and have at it locally.Can your friend even get a medical certificate? That’s the first thing to know before applying for one of these programs.
How does your friend feel about shelling out $110K for a full time effort that will take longer than advertised due to operational policies that limit flying options. That’s does not include housing or meals or various sundry items.
Airline Career Pilot Program / ATP Flight School
ATP's Airline Career Pilot Program flight training takes you from zero experience to commercial multi-engine instrument-rated pilot with certified flight instructor certificates in just 5 months.atpflightschool.com
At the end of the program, you’re not qualified to do anything other than teach, and there’s no guarantee ATP will hire anyone in their program.
There will not be time outside the program to work and you’re tied to the schedule, so any social or personal commitments have to be worked around.
Did you go thru the entire program? If you don't mind would you detail your experience please? If not on the open forum you could send me a PM.I didn't like them. Thought they were expensive and not very nice to the students.
Don’t fall for that one either, it’s simply a marketing gimmick.Secondly they have or say they have access to the airlines to at least put one in contact with appropriate hiring options.
True, the $100k isn’t an all-in cost, but a lot of that $100k will be recoverable with sale of the airplane in a year or two, so the real cost is fuel, insurance, maintenance, and instructor, all of which will total up to a lot less than $100k, AND she’ll be flying an airplane that isn’t a beat-up piece of crap (if that’s important to her) that’s available without scheduling issues whenever she chooses to fly.Options --- we talked about her buying an aircraft also but it would be hard to find a plane IFR and sound enough for that kind of hours and training for 100k. Then there is all the associated (we know how they add up) expenses plus instructor cost. You are still stuck renting for multi-engine / complex
Mind you part 141 schools can get their ratings with less experience, so the per hour cost is actually higher. You’ve finished and what do you know?Also, Commercial/multi/CFI/II/MEI is less than 300 hours if done effectively. Averaging $350/hour, even with instructor time and a little multi time, seems a little excessive.
Do you have a CFI? If not then maybe get one and teach her in your airplane.Thanks again for the replies .. For context some replies seemed direct to me but this is my 30 yr old GF who is interested.
I have personally been flying about 10 years with 2k hours and own a Columbia 400 so she is not that new to aviation.
I do agree the cost is crazy --- thanks for the insight and opinions.