Kritchlow
Final Approach
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- Dec 2, 2014
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Kritchlow
You know, I rarely respond to these type of threads, as I consider myself unqualified to answer.First of all, non-pilots lease aircraft all the time. Usually they are companies, but it could conceivably happen with an individual. Getting into the weeds a bit, the FAA distinguishes between a "wet" and a "dry" lease. "Wet" doesn't mean "with fuel" like an FBO rental. It means "with pilot and flight crew." "Dry," on the other hand, involves a transfer of full operational control to the lessee. In the purest sense, the lessee has complete choice of pilots subject only to such things as certificates, rating, and meeting insurance requirements..
Here's the grey: If it has a reason to look, the FAA will look at what the real relationship is, not just was the paperwork says. The paperwork can say all it wants about the businessman who knows nothing about flying having the choice of any qualified pilot, but the FAA will look at what's really going on. You dry leasing your airplane to someone and coincidentally being the pilot they choose? I'd expect that to be closely looked at
This is actually a big deal and it has been an FAA enforcement priority since COVID. I've been involved in two presentations on the subject, one as panelist and one as main speaker.
So, aside from the usual, "only if I get caught," there are ways to do it properly and ways to do it improperly,
That said, that was EXACTLY what my response would have been if I had responded.