tookamb
Filing Flight Plan
I have been checking prices for PPL training in NJ and I can not find anything around $5k. Does anyone know anything around that price?
Don't know of any, but at bare legal minimum of 40 hrs, which almost no one does, that's $125 hr avg. (even for just the rental) which is really low for this area of the country. Might be feasible, but doubtful. National avg I think is more like $8 -10K.I have been checking prices for PPL training in NJ and I can not find anything around $5k. Does anyone know anything around that price?
I am in central NJ, and did alot of shopping. The best I could find in NJ was maybe $8000 in more southern NJ. That was through a flight club, which did require membership at $45 per month. They had a 152 that you could purchase block time on at $93 per hour wet, and the instructor was $38 per hour. Figuring 60 hours to finish your training and 1 year, and you see where this is going. I am using a different place right by me, and the final tally will be in the 9000 to 10000 range. I highly doubt unless you find somebody to rent you a plane cheap, and find your own indipendant CFI, you can do $5000 in NJ, sorry. If you can get it done more around 45 to 50 hours, yes that will save alot of cash, but do not count on your likelyhood of doing that. The national PPL average time is 60 to 65 hours.
There are other incidentals in there also, like insurance, medical exam, price for the private written, and cost of the checkride, which will add another $1000 to any number.
Even based on those numbers and using the hours it took me, I would have been right around the $5000 price, and closer to $5000 than $6000.
I am basing on 60 hours to train which is the low end of national PPL average.
38 + 93 = 131 x 50 = 6550 dual time
93 x 10 = 930 solo cost
930 + 6550 = 7480 for 60 hour train
Add 45 per month as membership and use you 9 months time
45 x 9 = 405
so 405 +7480 = 7885
Like I said if you can get it done well below the nationa average yeah it saves money, but I would not use that numer if your budget is that tight.
if at 40 hour minumum 405 (meber ship fees) + 930 (solo cost) + 3930 (dual time) = 5265
So yes you could make it but only if you got there at minumum time. Nobody should budget for that.
You're forgetting a few things....Here is another couple of $$$
Written Exam
Charts
E6B
Plotter
Medical
Ground School
I am basing on 60 hours to train which is the low end of national PPL average.
38 + 93 = 131 x 50 = 6550 dual time
93 x 10 = 930 solo cost
930 + 6550 = 7480 for 60 hour train
Add 45 per month as membership and use you 9 months time
45 x 9 = 405
so 405 +7480 = 7885
Like I said if you can get it done well below the nationa average yeah it saves money, but I would not use that numer if your budget is that tight.
if at 40 hour minumum 405 (meber ship fees) + 930 (solo cost) + 3930 (dual time) = 5265
So yes you could make it but only if you got there at minumum time. Nobody should budget for that.
As I said earlier based on the hours it took ME - which was minimum time. So to say it can't be done is not entirely correct. And your numbers are off a little on the second part. You only need 20 hours of flight training.
So you could do 20 solo and 20 dual - reducing costs further.
I budgeted for 40, I hit my 40. So at least somebody can plan for it. Though that's not quite true. I didn't have a budget, it was going to cost what it was going to cost. Which for me was minimal.
Ok, so i will need a couple extra $$$. I would need 2 to 3 months more to save that, so back to the waiting game
Thanks guys.
Just out of curiousity, what are you planning to do AFTER you get your PPL? Are you going to have enough money to continue to fly?
Have you considered a Sport Pilot license? I imagine this could be in your budget. Not affiliated with this school, but came across them on Google: http://www.aeroventures.net/sport-pilot-flight-school/
Approximately 95% of my hours would fit the light sport criteria (including the plane I fly being a LSA) so I don't consider it very limiting for my purposes but others it may be. Depends on what you want to do with your license. Don't forget that you'll want some money left over to fly after your license also.
I wouldn't use the national average of 60 hours to figure it out. There are folks in there who are not serious and take a hundred plus hours and that screws up the average. It'd be a little more fair if there was no minimum hours limit so super pilots like me could help bring the average back, but alas, the government makes 40 hours a hard floor.
So, if you know your serious and can afford the training in terms of money and time then right off the bat you can lower that average 10 hours. If you know your not 'intellectually challenged' you can take another 5 to 10 hours off it. If you plan on doing training at a place not expecting icing conditions and have access to a full time CFI then deduct another 5 to 10 hours.
After the above calculations see what you get. If the answer is less than 40 add whatever you need to bring it up to 40 and there's your target.
Agreed. Get the funds beforehand. You will end up paying more if you don't have the money nowIf you can't afford the price of training no reason to get started. It only goes up from there.
If you can't afford the price of training no reason to get started. It only goes up from there.