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Started on July 13, 2026

This is where you start getting paid to fly.

Your Commercial certificate, hour by hour.

You already fly with precision and on instruments. The Commercial Pilot Certificate is the step that lets you be paid to do it — built on the flight time the industry wants and the sharper, professional-grade flying the checkride demands.

It really comes down to two things: hours in your logbook, and polish in your hands. Here's exactly what you'll build, and roughly the order it comes together.

250 hrs
Total flight time
ASEL
Single-engine land
KFPR/KVRB
Train on the Treasure Coast

The path to 250

Less a ladder, more a logbook.

Unlike earlier ratings, the commercial certificate isn't four lessons in a row — it's experience that builds in parallel and converges on one checkride. Four things make it up. None of them is a mystery.

Start
PPL + IR
100 hrs
Pilot-in-command
250 hrs
Total time
Checkride
Commercial
01

Build the hours

The certificate is built on experience: 250 hours total time, including 100 hours as pilot-in-command and 50 hours of cross-country PIC. This is the single largest piece of the commercial path — and the time the industry wants to see.

Key requirement
250 hrs total
100 hrs PIC
50 hrs XC PIC
02

Fly the long cross-countries

Specific commercial cross-country flights: one of at least 300 nm with landings at three points (a single leg over 250 nm), plus a 2-hour day and a 2-hour night cross-country, each more than 100 nm out. Real navigation, real distance.

Key requirement
300 nm solo XC
Day + night XC
03

Sharpen the commercial maneuvers

The precision flying the checkride is known for — chandelles, lazy eights, eights-on-pylons, steep spirals, steep turns, and the power-off 180° accuracy landing, plus short- and soft-field work. This is where your stick-and-rudder becomes professional-grade.

You'll master
Chandelles · Lazy 8s
Eights-on-pylons
Power-off 180
04

Log the advanced & instrument time

Beyond raw hours, the certificate calls for focused training: 10 hours in a complex or technically advanced airplane and 10 hours of instrument training — the depth a commercial pilot is expected to have before getting paid.

Required training
10 hrs complex / TAA
10 hrs instrument

Checkride · Commercial Pilot Certificate

An oral and flight test to commercial standards. Pass it, and you can legally be paid to fly. This is the certificate that turns flying from something you do into something you're hired for.

Outcome
Certificate issued
Eligible for paid flying

Before you start

What you need to begin — and what we'll be straight with you about.

Prerequisite
A Private Pilot certificate. That's the entry point for commercial training.
Instrument rating
Strongly recommended first. Without it, a commercial pilot can't be paid to carry passengers beyond 50 nm or at night.
Medical
A Second-Class medical for commercial work — and a First-Class if the airlines are the goal. Worth planning for early.
The real work
The gating factor here is hours and consistency, not new theory. Fly regularly and the 250 comes together faster than it looks.

Ready to fly for a living?

Tell us your current hours and ratings. We'll map your route to 250, lay out the maneuvers and required flights, and walk you through current pricing and time-building options.

Talk to us about starting

CG Flight Academy was established in 2025, and since then the academy has supplied flight companies with professional pilots and high-quality training services.

Register now! This journey to heaven begins!
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