The Airline Transport Pilot (ATP) certificate is the pinnacle of pilot certification. It is the minimum credential required to serve as pilot-in-command of scheduled airline flights and represents the highest standard of aeronautical knowledge and skill recognized by the FAA. This guide covers every requirement, the certification process, reduced-hour pathways, and how the ATP fits into your airline career.
What Is the ATP Certificate?
The Airline Transport Pilot certificate, governed by 14 CFR Part 61, Subpart G, authorizes the holder to act as pilot-in-command of aircraft in airline operations under Part 121 (scheduled airlines) and many Part 135 (charter) operations.
Under current FAA regulations (the 2013 Public Law 111-216, commonly called the "1,500-hour rule"), both the captain and first officer of Part 121 airline flights must hold an ATP certificate. Before this rule, first officers only needed a commercial pilot certificate.
The ATP is the professional credential that separates career airline pilots from all other certificate holders. It signals to employers, passengers, and regulators that you meet the highest standards of aeronautical experience and knowledge.
ATP Eligibility Requirements
Age
- Standard ATP: Must be at least 23 years old
- Restricted ATP (R-ATP): Must be at least 21 years old
The R-ATP allows younger pilots from military or qualifying university programs to begin airline flying earlier, with the restriction that they cannot serve as pilot-in-command of Part 121 operations until age 23.
Certificates and Ratings
You must hold:
- Commercial Pilot Certificate with appropriate aircraft category and class ratings
- Instrument Rating for the aircraft category
Medical Certificate
- First-class FAA medical certificate is required to exercise ATP privileges
- Must be renewed every 12 months if under age 40, or every 6 months if age 40 or older
- The first-class medical has the most stringent vision, cardiovascular, and general health standards
Other Requirements
- Must be able to read, speak, write, and understand English
- Must be of "good moral character" as defined by FAA standards
- Must pass the ATP Knowledge Test (after completing the CTP)
- Must pass the ATP Practical Test (checkride)
2025 Regulatory Change: ATP Issued With Type Rating
Effective February 1, 2025, the FAA changed how ATP certificates are issued. Flight training institutions can now only issue an ATP in conjunction with a type rating. Pilots seeking an ATP without adding a new type rating must enroll in a course for an aircraft in which they already hold a type rating.
This change restructures how ATP training works in practice. Most pilots now combine their ATP certification with type rating training in a specific aircraft, which aligns with how airlines have handled the process for years. If you are planning your ATP timeline, factor in the type rating component when budgeting time and money.
Flight Hour Requirements
The flight experience requirements are the most significant barrier to the ATP. Here are the pathways:
Standard ATP: 1,500 Hours
| Requirement | Minimum Hours |
|---|---|
| Total flight time | 1,500 |
| Pilot-in-command time | 250 |
| Cross-country flight time | 500 |
| Night flight time | 100 |
| Instrument flight time | 75 |
All 1,500 hours must be in aircraft (not simulators), though the 75 hours of instrument time can include up to 25 hours in an approved simulator.
Restricted ATP: Reduced Hours
The FAA provides reduced hour pathways for specific backgrounds:
| Pathway | Total Hours Required | Age Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Military pilot experience | 750 | 21 |
| 4-year aviation degree (R-ATP approved) | 1,000 | 21 |
| 2-year aviation degree (R-ATP approved) | 1,250 | 21 |
Military pilots (750 hours): Former military pilots with at least 750 hours of total flight time, including military pilot time, can qualify for the R-ATP. This is the most favorable pathway and reflects the intensive training military pilots receive.
4-year degree graduates (1,000 hours): Graduates of FAA-approved Restricted ATP university programs can qualify with 1,000 hours. Schools like Embry-Riddle, University of North Dakota, Western Michigan University, and Purdue offer these programs. This saves approximately 6 to 12 months of hour-building time.
2-year degree graduates (1,250 hours): Graduates of approved associate degree programs can qualify with 1,250 hours.
R-ATP Restrictions
The restricted ATP allows you to serve as:
- First officer (second-in-command) on Part 121 flights
- Pilot-in-command on Part 135 flights (with additional requirements)
You cannot serve as pilot-in-command on Part 121 flights until you meet the standard ATP age (23) and hour requirements (1,500). In practice, this is rarely a limitation since most new airline pilots spend years as first officers before upgrading to captain.
The ATP Certification Training Program (CTP)
Before you can take the ATP Knowledge Test, you must complete an FAA-approved ATP Certification Training Program. This requirement was established by the 2013 rule change.
What the CTP Covers
The CTP includes:
- Ground school (30+ hours): Advanced aerodynamics, meteorology, high-altitude operations, crew resource management, transport category aircraft systems, and air carrier operations
- Simulator time (10+ hours): Stall recognition and recovery training, upset prevention and recovery training (UPRT), and instrument proficiency in a transport-category simulator
CTP Providers and Costs (2026)
The national average for CTP training in 2026 runs $4,200 to $4,800, though some providers offer competitive rates below that range.
| Provider | Approximate Cost | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Aerostar Training Services | $3,180 - $3,500 | 5 days |
| Airborne Training | $4,200 | 5 days |
| ATP Flight School | $4,500 | 5 days |
| Delta Professional Services | $4,895 | 5 days |
| Pan Am Flight Academy | $5,000 - $6,500 | 5-7 days |
Aerostar offers group rates as low as $3,180 for six or more pilots enrolling together. Prices vary based on simulator age, facility location, and instructor availability.
Some airlines cover the CTP cost as part of their hiring process, especially during the current period of high demand.
CTP Completion Timeline
After completing the CTP, you receive a graduation certificate that is valid for the ATP Knowledge Test. You must pass the knowledge test within 24 calendar months of CTP completion.
The ATP Knowledge Test
After CTP completion, you take the ATP Knowledge Test:
- Number of questions: 80
- Time limit: 4 hours
- Passing score: 70%
- Test fee: $175
- Topics: Advanced weather, regulations, aerodynamics, performance, crew resource management, transport category aircraft systems
The knowledge test result is valid for 60 calendar months. The national pass rate is approximately 90% for first-time takers.
The ATP Practical Test (Checkride)
The ATP practical test is the most comprehensive checkride in civilian aviation:
Oral Exam (2-3 hours)
Topics include:
- ATP-specific regulations
- Crew resource management
- High-altitude aerodynamics
- Swept-wing aircraft performance
- Emergency procedures for transport category aircraft
- Weather theory and interpretation
- Navigation systems
Flight Test
The ATP flight test is typically conducted in a full-motion flight simulator approved for the purpose. It evaluates:
- Normal and abnormal procedures
- Instrument approaches (including CAT I, CAT II approaches)
- Engine failure procedures
- Crew coordination and communication
- Takeoffs and landings in various configurations
- Emergency procedures (engine fire, rapid decompression, etc.)
Most ATP checkrides are conducted as part of airline initial training programs, where the airline provides the simulator and the examiner. This means most pilots complete their ATP checkride during their first weeks of airline employment.
The Path to the ATP: A Typical Timeline
Phase 1: Training (7-24 months)
- PPL, Instrument Rating, CPL, Multi-Engine, CFI/CFII
- Cost: $60,000 - $130,000
Phase 2: Hour Building (14-30 months)
- Flight instruction, charter, survey, or other commercial flying
- Building from approximately 250 to 1,500 hours (or 1,000 for R-ATP)
- Earning $30,000-$50,000/year as a CFI
Phase 3: ATP Certification (1-3 months)
- Complete CTP ($3,200-$5,000)
- Pass ATP Knowledge Test
- Interview and get hired by an airline
- Complete airline-sponsored type rating and ATP checkride
Phase 4: Airline Career Begins
- Start as first officer at a regional airline
- Upgrade to captain after 2-5 years
- Transition to major airline after building experience
Total Timeline
| Path | Time from Zero to ATP |
|---|---|
| Accelerated + CFI hour-building (1,500 hrs) | 2.5 to 4 years |
| University program + CFI (R-ATP at 1,000 hrs) | 4 years (degree + 0-12 months building) |
| Part-time training + hour-building | 4 to 7 years |
| Military to R-ATP | Varies (military service + transition) |
Airline Hiring: What Happens After the ATP
The 2026 Hiring Landscape
The airline industry is in one of its strongest hiring cycles in history. Oliver Wyman estimates a shortfall of 24,000 pilots in 2026 — the projected peak of the current shortage. Roughly 3,000 mandatory retirements at legacy carriers are expected this year alone, with over 16,000 projected over the next five years.
Major airlines have announced aggressive hiring targets for 2026:
- United Airlines: Approximately 2,500 pilots
- American Airlines: Approximately 1,500 pilots
- Delta Air Lines: 600+ pilots in Q1 alone
Boeing projects that 119,000 new pilots will be needed in North America over the next 20 years. The FAA projects structurally high demand through 2045.
Regional Airlines
Most pilots begin their airline career at regional airlines. Current 2026 landscape:
- Minimum requirements: ATP certificate (or R-ATP), 1,500 hours total time (or reduced per R-ATP)
- First officer starting pay: $90,000-$110,000/year (up from $60,000-$80,000 in 2024)
- Captain pay: $150,000-$230,000/year depending on seniority
- Signing bonuses: $10,000-$50,000 at many regionals
- Time at regional: Typically 2-5 years before major airline transition
- Major regional airlines: SkyWest, Republic, PSA, Envoy, Endeavor, Mesa
Major Airlines
After building experience at a regional airline:
- Minimum requirements: ATP, 2,500-5,000+ total hours (varies by airline)
- First officer pay: $110,000-$150,000/year starting
- Captain pay: $300,000-$450,000/year at legacy carriers
- Senior widebody captain total compensation: $500,000-$750,000/year (salary, per diem, 401k, profit sharing)
- Median annual wage: $226,600 (BLS, May 2024)
- Major airlines: United, Delta, American, Southwest, Alaska, JetBlue, Frontier
Following unprecedented contract negotiations in late 2025 — including Delta's historic profit-sharing program and United's $10 billion pilot contract — airline pilot salaries increased 8-12% year-over-year, marking the strongest compensation growth in aviation history.
The 1,500-Hour Rule Debate
The 1,500-hour rule remains firmly in place as of 2026, despite ongoing industry debate.
Recent Developments
In late 2025, FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford affirmed his support for the rule, telling the Senate Commerce Committee: "I've been a supporter of 1,500 hours." Republic Airways' 2022 request for an exemption to qualify pilots at 750 hours was rejected by the FAA. The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) published a February 2026 analysis arguing the rule has directly contributed to improved airline safety outcomes since its implementation.
No Congressional legislation modifying the 1,500-hour requirement has passed, and the rule shows no signs of changing in the near term.
Arguments in Favor
- Ensures airline pilots have significant experience before carrying passengers
- Was enacted in response to the 2009 Colgan Air Flight 3407 accident that killed 50 people
- National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) supported higher standards
- Provides time for pilots to encounter and learn from various situations
- ALPA data shows improved safety record since implementation
Arguments Against
- Most other countries require far fewer hours (ICAO minimum is 250 hours for a CPL)
- Quality of hours matters more than quantity
- May discourage people from pursuing aviation careers due to the long, low-paid hour-building phase
- Airlines and industry groups have lobbied for modifications
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need an ATP to fly for the airlines?
Yes. Under current US regulations, both the captain and first officer of Part 121 airline flights must hold an ATP or R-ATP certificate. This has been the case since 2013.
Can I get an ATP for helicopters?
Yes. The ATP-helicopter requires 1,200 hours of total helicopter time (vs 1,500 for airplane). Helicopter ATPs are used in EMS, offshore, and other commercial helicopter operations but are less common than airplane ATPs.
How much does the full ATP certification cost?
The ATP-specific costs (CTP, knowledge test, and practical test) total approximately $4,000 to $6,000. However, the practical test is often included in airline-sponsored type rating training, so your out-of-pocket cost may be limited to the CTP and knowledge test.
Does the 2025 type rating requirement change anything for me?
If you are planning to get your ATP through an airline hiring program, likely nothing changes — airlines already combined the ATP and type rating during initial training. If you were planning to get a standalone ATP certificate independently, you now need to pair it with a type rating course, which adds cost and complexity.
Is the ATP harder than the commercial checkride?
The ATP checkride covers more advanced topics and is conducted in more complex aircraft (typically simulators representing transport category airplanes). However, by the time you reach the ATP level, you have significantly more experience and knowledge. Most pilots report that the ATP feels appropriate for their experience level.
What happens if I fail the ATP knowledge test or checkride?
You can retake the knowledge test after waiting 14 days. For the practical test, you receive additional training and can retest on the failed areas. Failure rates are relatively low because most candidates have extensive experience by the time they attempt the ATP.
The Bottom Line
The ATP certificate represents years of training, thousands of flight hours, and significant financial investment. It is also the key that unlocks the highest-paying and most prestigious positions in aviation. With the pilot shortage projected to peak in 2026 at 24,000 unfilled positions, airline salaries at historic highs after 8-12% year-over-year increases, and major carriers hiring thousands of pilots, the career opportunity for new ATP holders has never been stronger.
Plan your path early, build hours strategically, and keep your record clean. The airline cockpit is waiting.
Related Reading
- ATP Certificate: The 1500-Hour Rule
- VR&E Flight Training for Veterans
- ATP-CTP Cost for Airline Transition
- Home Flight Simulators for Pilot Training
- Private Pilot Checkride: Oral and Flight
-- The Flight School Finder Team