denverpilot
Tied Down
Here's a chart showing first year pay. Pretty much just multiply by 1000 ;
Like I said, I think it's decent at the top. But your first job isn't at a major.
We have people starting out of school in IT at twice what a regional pays, and if they're good, they're making your bottom Captain pay on your chart at a major, in less than ten years in the IT biz.
If they're mediocre they're making about the FO chart pay.
And that's from their FIRST job in the biz, not after they've put in a few years to get through 1000/1250/1500 hours of flight time somewhere, and then a regional for another few years.
That's from the day they walk out of school. If they picked a reasonable specialty or they're in even a mediocre specialty but have management/people skills to either go senior in a specialty or middle management plus tech.
If they go upper management and have that skillet they're topping out well above the Captain chart. Especially 20 years into their career.
It's not the high end of the airplane game that's not keeping up with other pro jobs, it's the years at the low end.
I have no intent of making a living from being a CFI, but I did the math. It'll pay less buy tens of thousands than my first tech job. And all I knew how to do back then was pull cables in buildings and keep panicking CSRs calm.
It's low by $40K for my first year field engineering job. In 1995, today. 22 years later.
Not complaining. I'm doing what I want to be doing. It's just a slope comparison. The bottom of the initial flying job to the top flying job is a massive slope.
We pay our bottom workers today, more than double what aviation does at the bottom. Less school and no flight time to buy. The low end wage compression in beginning aviation is nearly jaw dropping in comparison.