Hello,
First here is some background. I am 23, married, currently in the Air Force and live in North Carolina. I joined to eventually crossover to officer and become a pilot but have since decided to just go the civilian route using my GI bill along the way if possible. I got my PPL last year and currently have just over 52 hours.
My plan is once I get out of the military (between March and June of 2021), I will move down to Jacksonville, FL where my parents live. I don't plan on staying with them but I will if I have to. Once there my plan is to go to ATP flight school with PPL credit (costs about $70k), so between now and then I need to build about 35 more hours. At my local flight school a C172 is $150 wet and a 150 is $130 wet so that will cost me about $5000 so in the end $75,000+ minus however much I can save with the GI bill. I would need to take out a loan for ATP of about $70k.
The reason I want to go with ATP is it's quick, only 6 months. I'm already behind the curve from the military so I want to try to catch up as quick as possible.
Alternate plan: Would it be reasonable (I know its a gamble) to just buy a 172 or Cherokee 140/180 or even a 150. I would need to finance it, as I could only put down about $5k right now but a $20k or so loan pales in comparison to $70k. Then maybe take out a personal loan of I'm not sure how much and do all the training with my own airplane wherever I can? I don't know if it would actually save me much in the long run but at least I would own the airplane in the end.
Main problem with plan #2 is I think it would take longer, not look as good on a resume, and I might not be able to come up with the cash for flight training.
I really don't know how student loans for flight training works, or how the GI bill will help with flight training, from what I looked up online I think it only covers $14,000 a year which would be not nearly enough unless maybe I owned my own airplane.
Could you give me some advice? The only advice I'm not willing to hear is to just become an officer and be an air force pilot, my reasoning for that is below:
First here is some background. I am 23, married, currently in the Air Force and live in North Carolina. I joined to eventually crossover to officer and become a pilot but have since decided to just go the civilian route using my GI bill along the way if possible. I got my PPL last year and currently have just over 52 hours.
My plan is once I get out of the military (between March and June of 2021), I will move down to Jacksonville, FL where my parents live. I don't plan on staying with them but I will if I have to. Once there my plan is to go to ATP flight school with PPL credit (costs about $70k), so between now and then I need to build about 35 more hours. At my local flight school a C172 is $150 wet and a 150 is $130 wet so that will cost me about $5000 so in the end $75,000+ minus however much I can save with the GI bill. I would need to take out a loan for ATP of about $70k.
The reason I want to go with ATP is it's quick, only 6 months. I'm already behind the curve from the military so I want to try to catch up as quick as possible.
Alternate plan: Would it be reasonable (I know its a gamble) to just buy a 172 or Cherokee 140/180 or even a 150. I would need to finance it, as I could only put down about $5k right now but a $20k or so loan pales in comparison to $70k. Then maybe take out a personal loan of I'm not sure how much and do all the training with my own airplane wherever I can? I don't know if it would actually save me much in the long run but at least I would own the airplane in the end.
Main problem with plan #2 is I think it would take longer, not look as good on a resume, and I might not be able to come up with the cash for flight training.
I really don't know how student loans for flight training works, or how the GI bill will help with flight training, from what I looked up online I think it only covers $14,000 a year which would be not nearly enough unless maybe I owned my own airplane.
Could you give me some advice? The only advice I'm not willing to hear is to just become an officer and be an air force pilot, my reasoning for that is below:
- My vision is corrected to 20/20 but not corrected I don't think it would be good enough (20/400)
- It would take WAY longer 4 years for bachelors + 2 years for OTS and flight training (minimum) + a service commitment of probably 6 years so 12 years total vs doing it civilian I can get similar hours and bachelors degree in about 8-10 years I believe
- Always a chance I could fail flight training or get in trouble later in my career and not be able to fly, and therefore just wasting my time until I can separate