What Happens During the Pre-Flight Briefing?
Every lesson at Aviator.NYC starts with a 30-minute briefing before you touch the simulator. Your instructor sits down with you, pulls up the current weather at the airport you'll be "flying" from, and walks through what the conditions mean for your flight. This is where you start learning to think like a pilot — checking winds, visibility, and cloud cover before every flight.
The briefing is also where your instructor personalizes the lesson. If you've been watching YouTube videos about flying and have specific questions, this is the time to ask. If this is your very first exposure to aviation, your instructor will start from scratch and explain everything in plain language. The majority of our instructors are active airline pilots, so they bring real-world experience to every explanation — not just textbook answers.
By the end of the briefing, you'll know exactly what you're going to practice, why it matters, and what to look for on the instruments. Then it's time to get in the sim. Want to know more about choosing the right instructor? Read our guide on how to choose a flight instructor.

What Will You Actually Do in the Simulator?
After the briefing, you'll spend the remaining time — about 90 minutes — in a Redbird TD2 simulator equipped with a Garmin G1000 glass cockpit. This is the same avionics system used in modern Cessna 172s at flight schools across the country. Your instructor sits next to you and guides every step, starting with the basics: how to read the instruments, how to use the flight controls, and how the airplane responds to your inputs.
In a typical first lesson, you'll work through the pre-flight checklist to start the engine, taxi the airplane to the runway, take off, fly a rectangular traffic pattern around the airport, and attempt your first landing. Most students are surprised by how much they actually do in the first session. You're not watching a demonstration — you're flying from the left seat, with your instructor coaching you through every maneuver.
The simulator lets you pause, reset, and repeat any part of the lesson. If your first landing attempt doesn't go well (it probably won't — and that's completely normal), your instructor can reposition the airplane and let you try again immediately. In a real airplane, you'd need to fly the full pattern again, which takes 5-10 minutes. In the sim, it takes seconds. This is why simulator training is so effective for building foundational skills quickly.

Ready to Try It?
Book your first simulator lesson with an airline pilot instructor. No experience needed.
SELECT YOUR PATH
NYC / AVIATOR.NYCNEW PILOTS: WHAT'S YOUR GOAL?
LICENSED PILOTS: SELECT TRAINING
FLY AS A HOBBY
Learn safely, step-by-step, and at your own pace.
A private pilot license in NYC typically costs $12,000–$18,000. Most students need 60–80 flight hours to reach checkride proficiency. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft rental at each stage — and over 60% with a $780 training bundle ($130/hr). Pay-as-you-go pricing with no membership fees or upfront commitment.
See the full private pilot license cost breakdown →Yes. You need at least a Third Class FAA Medical Certificate before you can fly solo. Most healthy adults pass without issues — the exam covers basic vision, hearing, and general health. Schedule your exam with an Aviation Medical Examiner (AME) early in training. Important: if you have ever been prescribed medication for anxiety, depression, or ADHD — even as a child — talk to an AME before investing heavily in training to avoid surprises.
How to get your FAA medical certificate for flight training →Yes. Aviator.NYC's FAA-certified Advanced Aviation Training Device (AATD) with Garmin G1000 NXi avionics logs hours that count directly toward your private pilot certificate. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft rental — and over 60% with a training bundle — with no weather cancellations or maintenance delays. Train on 20+ aircraft configurations from Cessna 172 to Beechcraft Bonanza, all in Lower Manhattan.
FAA-approved flight simulator training in NYC →Most students earn their private pilot license in 4–12 months depending on training frequency. The FAA requires a minimum of 40 flight hours, but most students need 60–80 hours to reach checkride proficiency. A typical path: Weeks 1–2 in the simulator building foundations, Weeks 3–12 flying dual and solo at a local airport, then Months 3–12 completing cross-country flights and checkride prep. You control the pace — train around your work schedule.
Private pilot training timeline and milestones →Start with a 2-hour discovery session ($380) in Aviator.NYC's Manhattan simulator. No experience needed — your airline pilot instructor walks you through takeoff, flight, and landing. After your first session, you'll know if flight training is right for you. From there, a structured path takes you from simulator foundations to your first solo flight at a local airport.
Book your first flight lesson in Manhattan →Part 61 defines requirements for pilot certification. Part 141 defines requirements for school approval. Both use the same commercially available lesson plans and lead to the same FAA certificate. The key difference: under Part 61, every flight you take counts toward your certificate requirements. Under Part 141, off-syllabus flights don't count toward the 141 program. Part 61 dominates in NYC because the off-syllabus flexibility better serves students who train infrequently and want every flight hour to always count. Aviator.NYC operates under Part 61 — by design.
Part 61 vs Part 141 flight training — which is right for you →The FAA Private Pilot Knowledge Test is a 60-question multiple-choice exam covering aerodynamics, weather, navigation, regulations, and flight planning. You need a score of 70% or higher to pass. Most students use online prep courses like Sheppard Air or Sporty's and pass within 2–4 weeks of focused study. Pass the written test early in your training — it builds confidence and lets you focus on flying skills.
Private pilot training steps and written exam prep →Instructor quality matters more than price. Look for instructors with airline or professional experience who teach part-time because they love it — not because they're building hours. Visit 1–2 schools in person. Ask about cancellation rates, aircraft availability, and whether they use FAA-approved simulators to reduce cost. For NYC-area students, the closest GA airports are Republic Airport (KFRG), Morristown Airport (KMMU), Essex County Airport (KCDW), Westchester Airport (KHPN), and Lincoln Park Airport (N07).
Best flight training airports near New York City →FLY AS A CAREER
From first lesson to professional pilot — one clear path.
The career path follows six stages: Private Pilot License → Instrument Rating → Commercial Certificate → Multi-Engine Rating → CFI Certification → Airline Transport Pilot (ATP). Each rating builds on the previous one. You need 1,500 total flight hours for an ATP certificate, which most pilots build by instructing after earning their CFI. The entire pathway from zero experience to airline-eligible typically takes 4–6 years part-time or 18–24 months full-time.
See the complete career pilot roadmap — PPL through ATP →The complete career pathway costs roughly $80,000–$150,000+ spread across multiple ratings: Private Pilot ($22,250–$32,250), Instrument Rating ($9,250–$21,000), Commercial ($15,000–$50,000), Multi-Engine ($6,000–$8,000), and CFI ($3,000–$5,000). You don't pay this all at once — each rating is a separate phase. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% at every stage compared to aircraft time, and over 60% with training bundles. Once you earn your CFI, you earn $30–$60/hour while building the hours you need for airlines.
Full pilot license cost breakdown by rating →With consistent training, 18–24 months is realistic for the accelerated path. Most part-time students take 4–6 years. The bottleneck is building 1,500 total hours for an ATP certificate. After earning your CFI, instructing is the most common way to build hours while getting paid. Regional airlines are currently hiring pilots at 1,500 hours with competitive first-year pay.
Airline Transport Pilot requirements and timeline →The instrument rating is your next step. It teaches you to fly in clouds and low visibility using only your instruments — a requirement for every professional pilot path. The instrument rating requires 40 hours of instrument training (up to 20 hours can be in an FAA-approved simulator) and 50 hours of cross-country PIC time. Most working professionals complete it in 3–6 months.
Instrument rating — step 2 in the career pilot roadmap →Yes, for most career pilots. The CFI (Certified Flight Instructor) certificate lets you earn $30–$60/hour teaching other pilots while building the 1,500 hours you need for airlines. It also deepens your own flying knowledge — teaching forces mastery. Requirements: Commercial Pilot Certificate, Instrument Rating, 250+ total hours, and passing the CFI practical test. The training typically takes 20–30 additional flight hours.
CFI certification — step 5 in the career pilot roadmap →Airlines require a First Class FAA Medical Certificate. This is a more thorough exam than the Third Class medical used for private flying. It includes detailed vision, hearing, cardiovascular, and neurological screening. Most healthy adults pass. Get your First Class medical early — before investing in career training — to catch any potential issues. The exam is done by an Aviation Medical Examiner (AME) and is valid for 12 months.
FAA medical certificate requirements for career pilots →Yes, extensively. The FAA allows up to 20 hours of simulator time toward your instrument rating, up to 50 hours toward your commercial certificate, and up to 25 hours toward your ATP. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft at the standard rate — and over 60% with training bundles — across every stage of the career path. Aviator.NYC's AATD features the Garmin G1000 NXi and GFC 700 autopilot used in modern training aircraft, so skills transfer directly to the airplane.
How FAA-approved simulator training reduces career pilot costs →The multi-engine rating is required for most airline jobs. There is no FAA minimum flight time required, but most students need 10–15 hours of training. Cost is typically $6,000–$8,000. Training covers VMC demonstrations, single-engine operations, and asymmetric thrust management. Most pilots complete it in 1–2 weeks of intensive training.
Multi-engine rating — step 4 in the career pilot roadmap →YOUTH PROGRAM (AGES 8-17)
Safe, age-appropriate lessons that grow with your child.
Children can start simulator-based flight training at age 8. There are no medical requirements for simulator lessons. Training is structured by age: ages 8–12 focus on basic stick-and-rudder control, instrument scanning, and simple ATC calls in 1-hour sessions. Ages 13–15 progress to traffic patterns, VOR navigation, and checklist discipline in 2-hour sessions. The simulator is a zero-risk environment supervised by professional instructors.
Youth aviation program milestones by age →Under FAA regulations (FAR 61.87), a student pilot can solo a glider at age 14 and a powered airplane at age 16. At age 17, they are eligible for a full Private Pilot Certificate with 40+ hours of training. Starting simulator training at age 8–12 gives your child years of structured skill building before solo eligibility, creating a significant head start over peers who begin at 16.
FAA solo flight age requirements for young pilots →Youth training uses pay-as-you-go pricing designed for younger attention spans. 1-hour sessions at $190, 2-hour sessions at $380. A 6-hour training bundle ($780) saves over 30% compared to individual sessions. No membership fees or upfront commitment.
Youth flight training pricing and session options →Ages 8–12: Discovery and foundation — basic controls, instrument scanning, simple radio calls. Ages 13–15: Structured skill building — traffic patterns, navigation, checklist discipline. Age 16: Solo flight eligible (FAR 61.87) — pre-solo maneuvers, emergency procedures, student certificate. Age 17: Private Pilot Certificate eligible (FAR 61.103) — checkride, cross-country flights, instrument basics introduction.
Complete youth aviation age milestones and FAA requirements →Not for simulator training. Children ages 8–15 train exclusively in the FAA-approved simulator and do not need a medical certificate. A medical certificate is only required before solo flight in an actual aircraft, which is not permitted until age 16. When the time comes, most healthy teenagers pass the Third Class medical easily.
FAA medical requirements for student pilots under 18 →Yes. Early training creates a massive head start. A student who begins at age 8 has 8 years of structured skill building before solo eligibility at 16. Hours logged in the FAA-approved AATD simulator count toward future certificate requirements. By age 17, a dedicated student can hold a Private Pilot Certificate while peers are just starting. This is a direct path toward airline or professional aviation careers.
Career pilot roadmap starting from youth training →Instructors are active airline pilots or experienced CFIs who specialize in youth aviation training for ages 8–17. They understand age-appropriate pacing, use patient teaching methods, and make sessions engaging without sacrificing real aviation standards. Parents are welcome to observe every lesson from the instructor station.
Meet our airline pilot flight instructors →The FAA-approved AATD simulator is a zero-risk training environment. No aircraft is involved until your child reaches solo eligibility at age 16+. Children practice stalls, engine failures, and emergency procedures safely and repeatedly. The simulator uses the same Garmin G1000 NXi avionics found in real training aircraft, so skills transfer directly when they transition to flying.
FAA-approved flight simulator for youth training →INSTRUMENT RATING
Everything you need to know about earning your instrument rating:
The FAA requires 50 hours of PIC cross-country time, 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time (up to 20 hours in an FAA-approved AATD like Aviator.NYC's simulator), and passing both a written knowledge test and a practical checkride. You must already hold a Private Pilot Certificate. The 20 simulator hours alone save over $4,400 compared to logging that time in an airplane.
FAA instrument rating requirements explained (14 CFR 61.65) →Total cost typically ranges from $9,250 to $16,800 depending on pace and how much airplane time you add. The simulator-first approach saves over $4,400 compared to airplane-only training. Dual instruction starts at $190/hr in the simulator — over 45% less than aircraft rental. Training bundles save over 60%. Pay-as-you-go with no upfront commitment.
Instrument rating cost breakdown and simulator savings →Your first lesson starts with a 20-minute briefing covering instrument scan fundamentals and the G1000 NXi layout. Then 90 minutes of hands-on simulator time: straight-and-level flight by instruments only, basic attitude control, and an introduction to the instrument scan pattern. Your instructor is an airline pilot who flies IFR professionally — not someone learning alongside you. No experience with instruments required.
What to expect in your first IFR simulator lesson →Most working professionals complete their instrument rating in 3–6 months training 1–2 sessions per week. The 10-lesson simulator curriculum covers fundamentals through mock checkride. After the simulator phase, you transition to the airplane for cross-country time and real-world IFR experience. Consistent weekly sessions are more effective than sporadic blocks — instrument skills decay fast without regular practice.
Instrument rating training timeline and milestones →A structured 10-lesson progression: Lessons 1–2 build instrument scan and basic attitude flying. Lessons 3–5 introduce VOR navigation, holding patterns, and your first approach. Lessons 6–7 cover precision approaches (ILS, GPS). Lessons 8–9 add STARs, complex arrivals, and lost communications. Lesson 10 is a full mock checkride. Each session: 20-min briefing, 90-min simulator, 10-min debrief.
See the full 10-lesson IFR training plan →After building proficiency in the simulator, you take your instrument skills to the airplane at a local airport. The G1000 NXi in the simulator matches the avionics in common training aircraft (Cessna 172S, Cessna 182T), so the cockpit layout transfers directly. Cross-country flights build the PIC time required for your rating while practicing real ATC communications, weather decision-making, and approach procedures in actual conditions.
IFR simulator-to-airplane transition guide →The instrument rating checkride has two parts: an oral exam (~1.5 hours) covering regulations, weather theory, approach procedures, and decision-making scenarios; and a flight test (~2 hours) where you fly approaches, holds, intercepting and tracking courses, and demonstrate partial panel skills. The DPE will test unusual attitudes and recovery, and at least one missed approach. Lesson 10 in the curriculum is a full mock checkride that mirrors the real exam.
Instrument rating checkride preparation →IFR CURRENCY OPTIONS
Choose your IFR currency training option:
The FAA WINGS (Pilot Proficiency Program) lets you earn safety credit while rebuilding IFR proficiency. Aviator.NYC's LOFT scenarios are structured as WINGS activities — you get IFR currency practice and FAA safety credit simultaneously. Each scenario is a realistic cross-country flight with approaches, holds, and decision-making challenges designed by active airline pilots.
IFR currency through FAA WINGS simulator scenarios →Short, focused simulator sessions built around airports you actually fly to. Practice ILS, RNAV, and LOC approaches at local airports like Teterboro Airport (KTEB), Republic Airport (KFRG), Westchester Airport (KHPN), and Morristown Airport (KMMU). Complete your 6 approaches, holding, and tracking requirements in one or two sessions. No travel to an airport, no weather delays, no Hobbs time running while you brief approaches.
IFR currency approaches at NYC-area airports →Custom sessions built around your experience level, aircraft type, and specific currency needs. If you fly a Bonanza, we configure the G1000 NXi to match. If you need RNAV (GPS) approaches specifically, we build a profile focused on those. Your airline pilot instructor tailors the session to what you actually need — not a one-size-fits-all curriculum.
Custom IFR currency training sessions →Guided IFR currency practice with an airline-experienced CFII. Includes structured approach profiles, real-time feedback on instrument scan and procedures, and FAA WINGS credit. Ideal if you've been out of the IFR system for a while and want professional guidance rebuilding precision. If your currency has lapsed beyond 6 months, you'll need an Instrument Proficiency Check (IPC) — available as part of dual sessions. Dual sessions start at $380 for 2 hours.
Dual IFR currency training with instrument proficiency check →Independent simulator access for current IFR pilots at $170 for 2 hours. No checkout required — if you're familiar with G1000 NXi operations and know how to log approaches for currency, you can practice the required 6 approaches, holding, and tracking on your own. Solo practice saves roughly 75% compared to aircraft rental time. Available in bulk bundles for even greater savings.
Solo IFR currency simulator practice →What Should You Bring to Your First Lesson?
You don't need any special equipment for your first simulator lesson. Come in comfortable clothes — you'll be sitting in a cockpit seat for about 90 minutes. That's really it. If you have an iPad with a flight planning app like ForeFlight already installed, feel free to bring it, but it's completely optional. Most new students don't have one yet, and your instructor will help you get set up with the right tools after your first few lessons.
If you already have a pilot logbook, bring that too. If you don't, your instructor will give you one at the end of your lesson. A logbook is the official FAA record of your flight training, and every simulator session gets logged just like time in a real airplane. Your instructor will make your first entry and show you how the logging system works.
Do You Need Any Experience Before Your First Lesson?
No — and that's the whole point. Your first simulator lesson is designed for people who have never touched an airplane or a flight simulator before. You don't need to study anything in advance. You don't need to memorize any checklists. You don't need to know how to read aviation charts. Your instructor handles all of that and teaches you as you go.
Every student starts at a different place. Some people come in having watched hundreds of hours of flight training videos. Others walk in knowing nothing beyond "I want to learn to fly." Both are perfectly fine. Your instructor will figure out your level in the first few minutes and adjust the entire lesson accordingly. That personalized approach is a core part of how we teach — it's one of the reasons we match each student with an instructor who fits their learning style. Learn more about getting your student pilot certificate when you're ready to formalize things.
Where Is the Simulator Located?
Our simulator facility is at 131 Varick St in Hudson Square, Manhattan — right in Lower Manhattan, easily accessible by subway. When you arrive, ring apartment 4A and your instructor will buzz you in. The space is a dedicated training environment, not a storefront, so it's by appointment only.
The location is convenient for anyone commuting from Midtown, the Financial District, Brooklyn, or New Jersey. Most students train on weekday evenings or weekends. If you're curious about where you'll eventually fly a real airplane, check out our guide to the best flight training airports near NYC.
What Happens After Your First Lesson?
At the end of your first session, your instructor will log your simulator time in your pilot logbook, answer any remaining questions, and give you a few resources to review before your next lesson. You won't have homework in the traditional sense, but there are a few things that will help you get more out of future sessions.
One of the most useful things you can do between lessons is listen to live air traffic control communications. The website LiveATC.net streams real radio traffic from airports around the country. Your instructor will suggest tuning in to Republic Airport (KFRG) or Morristown Airport (KMMU) — two of the airports where our students typically do their airplane training. At first, the radio calls will sound like a foreign language. After a few weeks of casual listening, you'll start picking out patterns. For a deeper look at radio communications, see our guide to setting up your aviation radio.
Your instructor will also walk you through what your next lessons will cover: weather interpretation, aircraft performance, flight planning with ForeFlight, aircraft systems, and airspace rules. Each lesson builds on the previous one, and the order is adjusted based on your progress and goals.
How Does Simulator Training Fit into Your Pilot Journey?
After your first lesson, most students follow one of two paths. The first option is to complete two or three more simulator sessions to build a strong foundation — learning checklists, basic maneuvers, and radio communications — before transitioning to a real airplane at a nearby airport. The second option is to alternate between simulator and airplane training from the start, using the sim on weekday evenings and the airplane on weekends.
Both approaches work well. The simulator is particularly effective for practicing procedures and emergencies that are difficult or dangerous to replicate in a real airplane. You can practice engine failures, instrument approaches, and unusual attitudes without any risk. As your training progresses, the sim becomes a tool for reinforcing what you learn in the airplane and preparing for your private pilot checkride.
The FAA allows up to 2.5 hours of approved simulator time to count toward your private pilot certificate, and up to 20 hours toward an instrument rating. For students pursuing an instrument rating, the simulator becomes an even bigger part of the training program.
What Apps and Resources Should You Get?
Don't rush to buy anything before your first lesson. After you've completed a session or two and decided to continue training, here are the tools your instructor will likely recommend:
- ForeFlight ($200/year) — The industry-standard flight planning app used by student pilots and airline pilots alike. It handles weather, charts, flight plans, and aircraft performance calculations. Only purchase this after you've started training and your instructor confirms you're ready for it.
- FltPlan Go (free) — A solid free alternative to ForeFlight for basic flight planning and weather. Good option while you're deciding how far to take your training.
- AeroWeather (free) — A simple app for reading METAR and TAF weather reports. Your instructor will teach you how to decode these during your first few lessons.
- LiveATC (free) — Listen to live air traffic control at airports near NYC. Great for getting your ear used to aviation radio calls between lessons.

SELECT YOUR PATH
NYC / AVIATOR.NYCNEW PILOTS: WHAT'S YOUR GOAL?
LICENSED PILOTS: SELECT TRAINING
FLY AS A HOBBY
Learn safely, step-by-step, and at your own pace.
A private pilot license in NYC typically costs $12,000–$18,000. Most students need 60–80 flight hours to reach checkride proficiency. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft rental at each stage — and over 60% with a $780 training bundle ($130/hr). Pay-as-you-go pricing with no membership fees or upfront commitment.
See the full private pilot license cost breakdown →Yes. You need at least a Third Class FAA Medical Certificate before you can fly solo. Most healthy adults pass without issues — the exam covers basic vision, hearing, and general health. Schedule your exam with an Aviation Medical Examiner (AME) early in training. Important: if you have ever been prescribed medication for anxiety, depression, or ADHD — even as a child — talk to an AME before investing heavily in training to avoid surprises.
How to get your FAA medical certificate for flight training →Yes. Aviator.NYC's FAA-certified Advanced Aviation Training Device (AATD) with Garmin G1000 NXi avionics logs hours that count directly toward your private pilot certificate. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft rental — and over 60% with a training bundle — with no weather cancellations or maintenance delays. Train on 20+ aircraft configurations from Cessna 172 to Beechcraft Bonanza, all in Lower Manhattan.
FAA-approved flight simulator training in NYC →Most students earn their private pilot license in 4–12 months depending on training frequency. The FAA requires a minimum of 40 flight hours, but most students need 60–80 hours to reach checkride proficiency. A typical path: Weeks 1–2 in the simulator building foundations, Weeks 3–12 flying dual and solo at a local airport, then Months 3–12 completing cross-country flights and checkride prep. You control the pace — train around your work schedule.
Private pilot training timeline and milestones →Start with a 2-hour discovery session ($380) in Aviator.NYC's Manhattan simulator. No experience needed — your airline pilot instructor walks you through takeoff, flight, and landing. After your first session, you'll know if flight training is right for you. From there, a structured path takes you from simulator foundations to your first solo flight at a local airport.
Book your first flight lesson in Manhattan →Part 61 defines requirements for pilot certification. Part 141 defines requirements for school approval. Both use the same commercially available lesson plans and lead to the same FAA certificate. The key difference: under Part 61, every flight you take counts toward your certificate requirements. Under Part 141, off-syllabus flights don't count toward the 141 program. Part 61 dominates in NYC because the off-syllabus flexibility better serves students who train infrequently and want every flight hour to always count. Aviator.NYC operates under Part 61 — by design.
Part 61 vs Part 141 flight training — which is right for you →The FAA Private Pilot Knowledge Test is a 60-question multiple-choice exam covering aerodynamics, weather, navigation, regulations, and flight planning. You need a score of 70% or higher to pass. Most students use online prep courses like Sheppard Air or Sporty's and pass within 2–4 weeks of focused study. Pass the written test early in your training — it builds confidence and lets you focus on flying skills.
Private pilot training steps and written exam prep →Instructor quality matters more than price. Look for instructors with airline or professional experience who teach part-time because they love it — not because they're building hours. Visit 1–2 schools in person. Ask about cancellation rates, aircraft availability, and whether they use FAA-approved simulators to reduce cost. For NYC-area students, the closest GA airports are Republic Airport (KFRG), Morristown Airport (KMMU), Essex County Airport (KCDW), Westchester Airport (KHPN), and Lincoln Park Airport (N07).
Best flight training airports near New York City →FLY AS A CAREER
From first lesson to professional pilot — one clear path.
The career path follows six stages: Private Pilot License → Instrument Rating → Commercial Certificate → Multi-Engine Rating → CFI Certification → Airline Transport Pilot (ATP). Each rating builds on the previous one. You need 1,500 total flight hours for an ATP certificate, which most pilots build by instructing after earning their CFI. The entire pathway from zero experience to airline-eligible typically takes 4–6 years part-time or 18–24 months full-time.
See the complete career pilot roadmap — PPL through ATP →The complete career pathway costs roughly $80,000–$150,000+ spread across multiple ratings: Private Pilot ($22,250–$32,250), Instrument Rating ($9,250–$21,000), Commercial ($15,000–$50,000), Multi-Engine ($6,000–$8,000), and CFI ($3,000–$5,000). You don't pay this all at once — each rating is a separate phase. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% at every stage compared to aircraft time, and over 60% with training bundles. Once you earn your CFI, you earn $30–$60/hour while building the hours you need for airlines.
Full pilot license cost breakdown by rating →With consistent training, 18–24 months is realistic for the accelerated path. Most part-time students take 4–6 years. The bottleneck is building 1,500 total hours for an ATP certificate. After earning your CFI, instructing is the most common way to build hours while getting paid. Regional airlines are currently hiring pilots at 1,500 hours with competitive first-year pay.
Airline Transport Pilot requirements and timeline →The instrument rating is your next step. It teaches you to fly in clouds and low visibility using only your instruments — a requirement for every professional pilot path. The instrument rating requires 40 hours of instrument training (up to 20 hours can be in an FAA-approved simulator) and 50 hours of cross-country PIC time. Most working professionals complete it in 3–6 months.
Instrument rating — step 2 in the career pilot roadmap →Yes, for most career pilots. The CFI (Certified Flight Instructor) certificate lets you earn $30–$60/hour teaching other pilots while building the 1,500 hours you need for airlines. It also deepens your own flying knowledge — teaching forces mastery. Requirements: Commercial Pilot Certificate, Instrument Rating, 250+ total hours, and passing the CFI practical test. The training typically takes 20–30 additional flight hours.
CFI certification — step 5 in the career pilot roadmap →Airlines require a First Class FAA Medical Certificate. This is a more thorough exam than the Third Class medical used for private flying. It includes detailed vision, hearing, cardiovascular, and neurological screening. Most healthy adults pass. Get your First Class medical early — before investing in career training — to catch any potential issues. The exam is done by an Aviation Medical Examiner (AME) and is valid for 12 months.
FAA medical certificate requirements for career pilots →Yes, extensively. The FAA allows up to 20 hours of simulator time toward your instrument rating, up to 50 hours toward your commercial certificate, and up to 25 hours toward your ATP. Simulator training at $190/hr saves over 45% compared to aircraft at the standard rate — and over 60% with training bundles — across every stage of the career path. Aviator.NYC's AATD features the Garmin G1000 NXi and GFC 700 autopilot used in modern training aircraft, so skills transfer directly to the airplane.
How FAA-approved simulator training reduces career pilot costs →The multi-engine rating is required for most airline jobs. There is no FAA minimum flight time required, but most students need 10–15 hours of training. Cost is typically $6,000–$8,000. Training covers VMC demonstrations, single-engine operations, and asymmetric thrust management. Most pilots complete it in 1–2 weeks of intensive training.
Multi-engine rating — step 4 in the career pilot roadmap →YOUTH PROGRAM (AGES 8-17)
Safe, age-appropriate lessons that grow with your child.
Children can start simulator-based flight training at age 8. There are no medical requirements for simulator lessons. Training is structured by age: ages 8–12 focus on basic stick-and-rudder control, instrument scanning, and simple ATC calls in 1-hour sessions. Ages 13–15 progress to traffic patterns, VOR navigation, and checklist discipline in 2-hour sessions. The simulator is a zero-risk environment supervised by professional instructors.
Youth aviation program milestones by age →Under FAA regulations (FAR 61.87), a student pilot can solo a glider at age 14 and a powered airplane at age 16. At age 17, they are eligible for a full Private Pilot Certificate with 40+ hours of training. Starting simulator training at age 8–12 gives your child years of structured skill building before solo eligibility, creating a significant head start over peers who begin at 16.
FAA solo flight age requirements for young pilots →Youth training uses pay-as-you-go pricing designed for younger attention spans. 1-hour sessions at $190, 2-hour sessions at $380. A 6-hour training bundle ($780) saves over 30% compared to individual sessions. No membership fees or upfront commitment.
Youth flight training pricing and session options →Ages 8–12: Discovery and foundation — basic controls, instrument scanning, simple radio calls. Ages 13–15: Structured skill building — traffic patterns, navigation, checklist discipline. Age 16: Solo flight eligible (FAR 61.87) — pre-solo maneuvers, emergency procedures, student certificate. Age 17: Private Pilot Certificate eligible (FAR 61.103) — checkride, cross-country flights, instrument basics introduction.
Complete youth aviation age milestones and FAA requirements →Not for simulator training. Children ages 8–15 train exclusively in the FAA-approved simulator and do not need a medical certificate. A medical certificate is only required before solo flight in an actual aircraft, which is not permitted until age 16. When the time comes, most healthy teenagers pass the Third Class medical easily.
FAA medical requirements for student pilots under 18 →Yes. Early training creates a massive head start. A student who begins at age 8 has 8 years of structured skill building before solo eligibility at 16. Hours logged in the FAA-approved AATD simulator count toward future certificate requirements. By age 17, a dedicated student can hold a Private Pilot Certificate while peers are just starting. This is a direct path toward airline or professional aviation careers.
Career pilot roadmap starting from youth training →Instructors are active airline pilots or experienced CFIs who specialize in youth aviation training for ages 8–17. They understand age-appropriate pacing, use patient teaching methods, and make sessions engaging without sacrificing real aviation standards. Parents are welcome to observe every lesson from the instructor station.
Meet our airline pilot flight instructors →The FAA-approved AATD simulator is a zero-risk training environment. No aircraft is involved until your child reaches solo eligibility at age 16+. Children practice stalls, engine failures, and emergency procedures safely and repeatedly. The simulator uses the same Garmin G1000 NXi avionics found in real training aircraft, so skills transfer directly when they transition to flying.
FAA-approved flight simulator for youth training →INSTRUMENT RATING
Everything you need to know about earning your instrument rating:
The FAA requires 50 hours of PIC cross-country time, 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time (up to 20 hours in an FAA-approved AATD like Aviator.NYC's simulator), and passing both a written knowledge test and a practical checkride. You must already hold a Private Pilot Certificate. The 20 simulator hours alone save over $4,400 compared to logging that time in an airplane.
FAA instrument rating requirements explained (14 CFR 61.65) →Total cost typically ranges from $9,250 to $16,800 depending on pace and how much airplane time you add. The simulator-first approach saves over $4,400 compared to airplane-only training. Dual instruction starts at $190/hr in the simulator — over 45% less than aircraft rental. Training bundles save over 60%. Pay-as-you-go with no upfront commitment.
Instrument rating cost breakdown and simulator savings →Your first lesson starts with a 20-minute briefing covering instrument scan fundamentals and the G1000 NXi layout. Then 90 minutes of hands-on simulator time: straight-and-level flight by instruments only, basic attitude control, and an introduction to the instrument scan pattern. Your instructor is an airline pilot who flies IFR professionally — not someone learning alongside you. No experience with instruments required.
What to expect in your first IFR simulator lesson →Most working professionals complete their instrument rating in 3–6 months training 1–2 sessions per week. The 10-lesson simulator curriculum covers fundamentals through mock checkride. After the simulator phase, you transition to the airplane for cross-country time and real-world IFR experience. Consistent weekly sessions are more effective than sporadic blocks — instrument skills decay fast without regular practice.
Instrument rating training timeline and milestones →A structured 10-lesson progression: Lessons 1–2 build instrument scan and basic attitude flying. Lessons 3–5 introduce VOR navigation, holding patterns, and your first approach. Lessons 6–7 cover precision approaches (ILS, GPS). Lessons 8–9 add STARs, complex arrivals, and lost communications. Lesson 10 is a full mock checkride. Each session: 20-min briefing, 90-min simulator, 10-min debrief.
See the full 10-lesson IFR training plan →After building proficiency in the simulator, you take your instrument skills to the airplane at a local airport. The G1000 NXi in the simulator matches the avionics in common training aircraft (Cessna 172S, Cessna 182T), so the cockpit layout transfers directly. Cross-country flights build the PIC time required for your rating while practicing real ATC communications, weather decision-making, and approach procedures in actual conditions.
IFR simulator-to-airplane transition guide →The instrument rating checkride has two parts: an oral exam (~1.5 hours) covering regulations, weather theory, approach procedures, and decision-making scenarios; and a flight test (~2 hours) where you fly approaches, holds, intercepting and tracking courses, and demonstrate partial panel skills. The DPE will test unusual attitudes and recovery, and at least one missed approach. Lesson 10 in the curriculum is a full mock checkride that mirrors the real exam.
Instrument rating checkride preparation →IFR CURRENCY OPTIONS
Choose your IFR currency training option:
The FAA WINGS (Pilot Proficiency Program) lets you earn safety credit while rebuilding IFR proficiency. Aviator.NYC's LOFT scenarios are structured as WINGS activities — you get IFR currency practice and FAA safety credit simultaneously. Each scenario is a realistic cross-country flight with approaches, holds, and decision-making challenges designed by active airline pilots.
IFR currency through FAA WINGS simulator scenarios →Short, focused simulator sessions built around airports you actually fly to. Practice ILS, RNAV, and LOC approaches at local airports like Teterboro Airport (KTEB), Republic Airport (KFRG), Westchester Airport (KHPN), and Morristown Airport (KMMU). Complete your 6 approaches, holding, and tracking requirements in one or two sessions. No travel to an airport, no weather delays, no Hobbs time running while you brief approaches.
IFR currency approaches at NYC-area airports →Custom sessions built around your experience level, aircraft type, and specific currency needs. If you fly a Bonanza, we configure the G1000 NXi to match. If you need RNAV (GPS) approaches specifically, we build a profile focused on those. Your airline pilot instructor tailors the session to what you actually need — not a one-size-fits-all curriculum.
Custom IFR currency training sessions →Guided IFR currency practice with an airline-experienced CFII. Includes structured approach profiles, real-time feedback on instrument scan and procedures, and FAA WINGS credit. Ideal if you've been out of the IFR system for a while and want professional guidance rebuilding precision. If your currency has lapsed beyond 6 months, you'll need an Instrument Proficiency Check (IPC) — available as part of dual sessions. Dual sessions start at $380 for 2 hours.
Dual IFR currency training with instrument proficiency check →Independent simulator access for current IFR pilots at $170 for 2 hours. No checkout required — if you're familiar with G1000 NXi operations and know how to log approaches for currency, you can practice the required 6 approaches, holding, and tracking on your own. Solo practice saves roughly 75% compared to aircraft rental time. Available in bulk bundles for even greater savings.
Solo IFR currency simulator practice →Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need any flying experience for my first simulator lesson?
No. Your first lesson is designed for complete beginners. Your instructor will start from scratch and adapt the pace to your level. Many of our students have never been in a cockpit of any kind before their first session.
How long is a simulator lesson?
A standard lesson is two hours. The first 30 minutes is a briefing with your instructor, and the remaining 90 minutes is hands-on time in the simulator. You can also book shorter or longer sessions depending on your schedule.
What should I bring to my first simulator lesson?
Just yourself and comfortable clothes. If you have a pilot logbook or an iPad with ForeFlight, bring those, but neither is required. Your instructor will provide a logbook if you don't have one.
Is simulator time counted toward my pilot certificate?
Yes. The FAA allows up to 2.5 hours of approved simulator (AATD) time to count toward your private pilot certificate, and up to 20 hours toward an instrument rating. Every hour you log in our simulator is real training time in your logbook.
Can kids take simulator lessons?
Yes. We offer simulator lessons for young aviators as young as 7 years old. The sessions are tailored to be age-appropriate and engaging. Check our Young Aviators page for details on youth programs.