poadeleted20
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I charge $400/day or $60/hour, plus expenses.
Would a big hug be okay too guys?
Most CFIs around here don't even make $400/week . Just not many people interested in flying anymore .I charge $400/day or $60/hour, plus expenses.
not to derail the thread or get too personal, but what are CFIs charging on average? I paid 45/hr for my instrument training. I can't remember but I paid at least 35 for PPL 4 years ago.
Most CFIs around here don't even make $400/week . Just not many people interested in flying anymore .
I've gotten big hugs from trainees after their checkride -- both guys and gals. That's not how it was when I was learning a few decades ago, but it's the 21st century, I guess. Like the Bellamy Brothers said, "I ain't tryin' to change nobody, I'm just tryin' real hard to adjust."Would a big hug be okay too guys?
Are you female? Really cute? What are you wearing? If you answer yes, yes, and merely smile sweetly, then that'll do just fine! Lol
I charge $50hr because I'm worth every damn cent, my students tend to agree, how much I make a year is irrelevant, the service I provide to the amount I charge is what matters and my customers aint complaining.
West coast and most places I've been $50hr is average.
Not sure about that! We get a good turnout for our little school.
I charge $400/day or $60/hour, plus expenses.
I live all up and down the west coast at this time.
50 bucks is about average in WA, OR, CA, heck even when I was in GA 50 was about common.
That was Nick. Remember what I said above about not being a Scrooge?okay. someone used $30/hr as an example and I thought I overpaid.
I'm not sure if you're intentionally trying to troll people or you're just clueless, but the things you've said in this thread are so far from reasonable that I see no third option. I think you should go earn your CFI (assuming you haven't already) and then try to earn a living with it by charging $30/hr (something you clearly have not done)....various posts in this thread...
I also don't understand wanting to pay less because the CFI is looking to use this as a stepping stone.
Doctors, lawyers, musicians, actors, senators, pretty much everyone does this, most start off lower then their career pinicle and move up, but I have yet to hear some knuckle dragging idiot say to a lawyer, "why should I pay you this much when your just using this job to build experience to make partner?"
My CFI (younger than my eldest son) has given me a gift I can never repay - I learned how to fly a friggin' airplane! He got me to my check ride in 6 months. He works for a school, so like others who have posted here, I know what I paid the school, but I have no idea what his cut was. He always returned calls, always was willing to adjust his schedule to meet my weird work schedule, encouraged me when I got frustrated , was extraordinarily patient with me... not to mention he is incredibly talented. On top of all that, he give ME a gift when I passed my check ride. (I was his first PPL endorsement sent off to face the DPE.) Of course I tipped him. A Visa gift card to buy the aviation gizmo of his choice, and a brew house gift card . I tried to be generous, though I'm not sure any amount would have been enough. I will also happily refer others to him. And when I get around to needing a complex or high performance endorsement, I will seek him out. If I had a CFI that just did his/her job, maybe I wouldn't have tipped, but maybe I wouldn't have finished either.
Actually, a lot of actors actor for free or a non-livable wage during the beginning of their career, at least in theatre. It's doing what is a non-traditional career and what you love is now an excuse to not pay people good wages.
Nick, do you also think the regional FO is overpaid at $23 an hour and only paid when the doors are closed and probably only makes their guarantee of 75 hours a month even though they're only home 9 days out of the month?
For clarifications sake - I am a pilot, I do have my PPL, but I do not have my CFI. The problem is that by adding the word "Airplane" to anything, the cost immediately doubles or triples, which I think is flat out inappropriate, especially when considering that the task set associated with a CFI is only slightly more complex than that of a math tutor, and only more complex because a math tutor doesn't need to show you how to hold the pencil.
Also - the argument of "CFIs need to make a living," is a non-starter. I can't go to my boss and demand a raise on a 6 figure salary because "Its not enough to live on," so why would a CFI get to make a similar argument on a livable wage that far exceeds minimum wage?
Airplanes, being much less complex than cars, should cost less. CFIs, being much less complex than music instructors, should charge less.
But hey - if you want to reinforce in your head that you're worth every penny you make as a CFI (and much, much more because you're "under" paid), then go right ahead - hell, you should make as much as a CEO, because CEOs won't die if their employees make a mistake right?
I charge $400/day or $60/hour, plus expenses.
For clarifications sake - I am a pilot, I do have my PPL, but I do not have my CFI. The problem is that by adding the word "Airplane" to anything, the cost immediately doubles or triples, which I think is flat out inappropriate, especially when considering that the task set associated with a CFI is only slightly more complex than that of a math tutor, and only more complex because a math tutor doesn't need to show you how to hold the pencil.
Also - the argument of "CFIs need to make a living," is a non-starter. I can't go to my boss and demand a raise on a 6 figure salary because "Its not enough to live on," so why would a CFI get to make a similar argument on a livable wage that far exceeds minimum wage?
Airplanes, being much less complex than cars, should cost less. CFIs, being much less complex than music instructors, should charge less.
But hey - if you want to reinforce in your head that you're worth every penny you make as a CFI (and much, much more because you're "under" paid), then go right ahead - hell, you should make as much as a CEO, because CEOs won't die if their employees make a mistake right?
This is where you don't get it Nick. You say, by far exceeds, minimum wage. If you actually look at the numbers you'll discover that many instructors are damn close to minimum wage.
Nobody has sugested that we expect a tip.If you want a REAL analogy, here's the best I can think of - its pretty close:
Real Estate Agents - they work their tails off, and often do it for no pay at all if the sale doesn't complete. If it does, they get 3% (or less) of the sales price of the home. Many times, this means months and months between sales.
When the sale completes, who gets the gift, the real estate agent or the customer? The customer does - because the real estate agent relies on word of mouth marketing as his primary source of new customers.
CFIs are much like that - they do a lot of work without pay (arguably), but in the end, they should be wooing their students back for referrals and follow ups. Expecting a tip on a job that you are paid handsomely for already is silly.
I hadn't gotten around to responding to your earlier post, Jesse, but I disagree that you should be counting "phone sales time" and other prep work toward your hourly rate. You are, in essence, in business for yourself. Many businessmen do not get to count those hours toward their bottom line, and don't bill their customers for the time either.
As an analogy, the teacher that does Drivers Education classes also has to field phone calls from prospective students and parents. He doesn't usually charge for his sales calls either.
Right Nick but that's the overhead of the business. You're failing to recognize that running a business has overhead and that overhead means you can't bill for every single hour. Hence why your hourly rate is higher then it would be if you could easily bill for 2080 hours per year.
Find me another industry where it takes the same level of money, work, and dedication to be good at (like flight instructing) to where people are billing $30/hr.
How about $0/hr. Look up just a bit for Real Estate Agents.
Or how about a CDL Instructor (actually a tougher job due to the fact that you're dealing with much tighter confinements and more precision - think feet vs. tens of feet). Their hourly rate is generally much less, and more importantly, you can get the entire license for less than the CFI's costs alone for a private cost.
Does one have to pay thirty thousand dollars out of pocket to be a cdl instructor? I would also wager that a decent cdl instructor brings home 50k per year or more. In order to do that as a full time flight instructor you'd probably have to bill $80/hr or more.
I fail to see what real estate agents have to do with this Nick. They make commission on the sale and the successful ones make piles of money more than any instructor does.
I can't even get someone to pull low voltage cable for the hourly rate that the local flight instructors charge.
An Indian software developer costs more per year than your typical flight instructor by several times.
Real Estate agents may make $0 on many, many hours worth of labor if a sale does not close.
An Indian software developer also works many more hours per week than a CFI, including commute to work, phone time to prep for work, and a number of other non-billable expenses.
I still haven't figured out if you're a troll or just a idiot (at least when it comes to aviation).
So your relator, yeah, that's a online class that can be done in a few weeks for a few hundred bucks (plus fingerprints and testing fee).
Your math tutor and music teacher, I'm guessing they are not federally licensed with 40+k in education, guessing the Feds dont track the success or lack thereof of their students, guessing if one of their students hits the wrong note the Feds don't investigate?
And one of the few things you appeared to understand, in aviation if you really F' up, well, you die.
As for your bus driver comment lol So that bus driver knows all the systems of his rig to the point of a ATP? He has a medical every 6 months, yearly ride with the Feds, again 40+k education, can operate the bus in zero visibility, logs yearly simulator sessions, learns CRM, etc, etc. Oh yea, also forgot that WHOLE EXTRA DIMENSION he doesn't have to worry about.
So what exactly do you do for a living???