Bad training experience has made me question finishing
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Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Hey everyone, I've had a lot of setbacks including being kicked out of a school, schools wait years long waitlists, block time sellers running away after getting my money, and the usual WX + MX issues.
I've been working on my ratings for 6 years now and I've hated every moment due to the factors I mentioned above. Everything has taken way longer than it should, to the point I've had check rides expire. I feel like I'd never want to quit a stable job to jump into an industry that seems to only be full of problems.
Has anyone else had a bad training experience but things turned around once you got a job?
Am I being silly or have all the bad experiences meant I should look elsewhere?
I've been working on my ratings for 6 years now and I've hated every moment due to the factors I mentioned above. Everything has taken way longer than it should, to the point I've had check rides expire. I feel like I'd never want to quit a stable job to jump into an industry that seems to only be full of problems.
Has anyone else had a bad training experience but things turned around once you got a job?
Am I being silly or have all the bad experiences meant I should look elsewhere?
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Not everyone is cut out for this. From the 100+ people that started my aviation college program around 20 people graduated. Of those less than 10 are still in the industry as pilots. Most of those people could be making more in other industries in my opinion.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
What happened to the 10 that left?
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
The only thing fun about flight training is the actual flying. Everything else around it can get quite frustrating.
You're paying a lot of money but are often treated as a nuisance by flight schools.
My initial PPL training was about 1 flight every month with a private instructor. The actual lessons were fine but he always had an excuse to cancel. I got fed up and told him I'd find someone else if things didn't improve.
For my instrument rating I ended up taking 4 am sim slots to avoid a similar experience and get it done. Promises of 'being done in x months' mean very little. Sometimes there are valid wx excuses. More often than not it's schools taking on more students than they can handle.
6 years seems extreme though. Are you limited to one location? Why would check rides expire? Where are you in your training?
You're paying a lot of money but are often treated as a nuisance by flight schools.
My initial PPL training was about 1 flight every month with a private instructor. The actual lessons were fine but he always had an excuse to cancel. I got fed up and told him I'd find someone else if things didn't improve.
For my instrument rating I ended up taking 4 am sim slots to avoid a similar experience and get it done. Promises of 'being done in x months' mean very little. Sometimes there are valid wx excuses. More often than not it's schools taking on more students than they can handle.
6 years seems extreme though. Are you limited to one location? Why would check rides expire? Where are you in your training?
As an AvCanada discussion grows longer:
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
almost finished, I am partway through IFR, I had spent months in 2022 trying to get my CPL ride done before the Jan 2023 exemption expired, so I ended up doing a CPL twice effectively :/digits_ wrote: ↑Wed Dec 03, 2025 10:30 pm The only thing fun about flight training is the actual flying. Everything else around it can get quite frustrating.
You're paying a lot of money but are often treated as a nuisance by flight schools.
My initial PPL training was about 1 flight every month with a private instructor. The actual lessons were fine but he always had an excuse to cancel. I got fed up and told him I'd find someone else if things didn't improve.
For my instrument rating I ended up taking 4 am sim slots to avoid a similar experience and get it done. Promises of 'being done in x months' mean very little. Sometimes there are valid wx excuses. More often than not it's schools taking on more students than they can handle.
6 years seems extreme though. Are you limited to one location? Why would check rides expire? Where are you in your training?
Planes being broken for months and having to switch schools are a huge part of why it's taken so long.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
What part of the country are you in?
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TalkingPie
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Out east!
What did you almost fail on your IFR ride?TalkingPie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:40 am I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
Honestly if I hadn't have dumped so much money into it (and caused a lot of grief at work with days off, and projects on hold due to studying for exams) I would walk away.
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nine sixteenths
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
If you complete this, sit down and reflect heavily on the process, how you contributed to the issues leading to it being a 6 year process, and what you learned from it. These will likely be questions when you’re being interviewed for your first job, because 6 years to get licensed is a huge red flag as an employer.TalkingPie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:40 am I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Do they normally ask how long it took? I did it on the side and school waitlists plus bad wx are the reason things took so long. Doesn't seem like a red flag?nine sixteenths wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 4:54 pmIf you complete this, sit down and reflect heavily on the process, how you contributed to the issues leading to it being a 6 year process, and what you learned from it. These will likely be questions when you’re being interviewed for your first job, because 6 years to get licensed is a huge red flag as an employer.TalkingPie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:40 am I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
If you were doing it full time, it would be a red flag.lostav8r wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 5:12 pmDo they normally ask how long it took? I did it on the side and school waitlists plus bad wx are the reason things took so long. Doesn't seem like a red flag?nine sixteenths wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 4:54 pmIf you complete this, sit down and reflect heavily on the process, how you contributed to the issues leading to it being a 6 year process, and what you learned from it. These will likely be questions when you’re being interviewed for your first job, because 6 years to get licensed is a huge red flag as an employer.TalkingPie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:40 am I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
But in your case, certainly not.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Thanks for clarifying! Full time at 6 years someone would probably have 1500 hours in the pattern at that point hahanohojob wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 5:43 pmIf you were doing it full time, it would be a red flag.lostav8r wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 5:12 pmDo they normally ask how long it took? I did it on the side and school waitlists plus bad wx are the reason things took so long. Doesn't seem like a red flag?nine sixteenths wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 4:54 pm
If you complete this, sit down and reflect heavily on the process, how you contributed to the issues leading to it being a 6 year process, and what you learned from it. These will likely be questions when you’re being interviewed for your first job, because 6 years to get licensed is a huge red flag as an employer.
But in your case, certainly not.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
How do you get kicked out of a flight school?TalkingPie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:40 am I can tell you that I'm in a very similar position. I started my PPL in late 2018 and am currently at a little over 300 hours with multi IFR and nearly done my CPL after spending over $100,000. I was also kicked out of a flight school. Stopped flying for a year because of a layoff during the pandemic. Have had trouble aligning work, weather, and flight school schedules.
Not flying regularly has made it difficult to gain confidence and proficiency. Despite not having yet busted an exam or check ride (multi-IFR was really close...), I'm constantly doubting my abilities, and my instructors, right or wrong, have done little to assuage those doubts.
I can't yet tell you how it'll work out for me, but maybe it'll help to hear that you're not the only one who's experiencing this.
What does it take for a school to say, “we don’t want your money”?
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
That is how you know that they're the problem.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Not sure it’s always the school’s fault. I had a number of occasions where I had to have a pretty tough heart-to-heart with student’s who had spent various amounts of money and time, from not too much to quite a lot, on their training. The not so much were students who had started with us and just weren’t cut out to be pilots. The quite a lot ones were folks who had attended a number of schools and accumulated a rather large number of training hours before coming to us.
I would be straightforward with them in suggesting that perhaps flying wasn’t in the cards for them. It’s not a given that just because you want something you’re entitled to get it. Sometimes it was attitude, sometimes it was ability and most often a mix of the two. It was almost always initially met with anger or resentment, but occasionally with appreciation for getting an honest assessment.
However, flight training itself has developed into a process where you can, in fact, brute force your way through. And sometimes life is such that you can’t devote yourself to frequent training lessons and get through more quickly and less expensively. If that’s the case you have to accept that reality and realize that it’s going to take you a lot more money and many more hours because recency/currency is a major factor in how much time/money your training will take.
Everyone’s individual situation is unique however and self assessment is hard for all of us. Hopefully anyone who is facing the time/money challenge has access to someone they trust (and will listen to) who can give them some advice to help in making what is a very tough decision.
I would be straightforward with them in suggesting that perhaps flying wasn’t in the cards for them. It’s not a given that just because you want something you’re entitled to get it. Sometimes it was attitude, sometimes it was ability and most often a mix of the two. It was almost always initially met with anger or resentment, but occasionally with appreciation for getting an honest assessment.
However, flight training itself has developed into a process where you can, in fact, brute force your way through. And sometimes life is such that you can’t devote yourself to frequent training lessons and get through more quickly and less expensively. If that’s the case you have to accept that reality and realize that it’s going to take you a lot more money and many more hours because recency/currency is a major factor in how much time/money your training will take.
Everyone’s individual situation is unique however and self assessment is hard for all of us. Hopefully anyone who is facing the time/money challenge has access to someone they trust (and will listen to) who can give them some advice to help in making what is a very tough decision.
Being stupid around airplanes is a capital offence and nature is a hanging judge!
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.”
Mark Twain
“It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so.”
Mark Twain
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nine sixteenths
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Anyone taking 6 years is a red flag, but if you are explaining it was part time that’s better than “schools kept failing me”
- Daniel Cooper
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
People have a tendency to continue an endeavor once an investment in money, effort, or time has been made. This is called Sunk Cost Fallacy. It can also be described as throwing good money after bad, or refusing to do what's described as cutting one's losses.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
This post should be required reading for all instructors. Most endeavors aren't for everybody. Better people figure that out sooner than blowing a bunch of money just to wash out during their first job because their employer will only give them 3 hours to learn a new plane.5x5 wrote: ↑Fri Dec 05, 2025 7:50 am Not sure it’s always the school’s fault. I had a number of occasions where I had to have a pretty tough heart-to-heart with student’s who had spent various amounts of money and time, from not too much to quite a lot, on their training. The not so much were students who had started with us and just weren’t cut out to be pilots. The quite a lot ones were folks who had attended a number of schools and accumulated a rather large number of training hours before coming to us.
I would be straightforward with them in suggesting that perhaps flying wasn’t in the cards for them. It’s not a given that just because you want something you’re entitled to get it. Sometimes it was attitude, sometimes it was ability and most often a mix of the two. It was almost always initially met with anger or resentment, but occasionally with appreciation for getting an honest assessment.
However, flight training itself has developed into a process where you can, in fact, brute force your way through. And sometimes life is such that you can’t devote yourself to frequent training lessons and get through more quickly and less expensively. If that’s the case you have to accept that reality and realize that it’s going to take you a lot more money and many more hours because recency/currency is a major factor in how much time/money your training will take.
Everyone’s individual situation is unique however and self assessment is hard for all of us. Hopefully anyone who is facing the time/money challenge has access to someone they trust (and will listen to) who can give them some advice to help in making what is a very tough decision.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
I know it's impossible to get actual numbers but how often does washing out on your first job happen? I feel like this place would be full of people complainingBede wrote: ↑Sat Dec 06, 2025 8:15 amThis post should be required reading for all instructors. Most endeavors aren't for everybody. Better people figure that out sooner than blowing a bunch of money just to wash out during their first job because their employer will only give them 3 hours to learn a new plane.5x5 wrote: ↑Fri Dec 05, 2025 7:50 am Not sure it’s always the school’s fault. I had a number of occasions where I had to have a pretty tough heart-to-heart with student’s who had spent various amounts of money and time, from not too much to quite a lot, on their training. The not so much were students who had started with us and just weren’t cut out to be pilots. The quite a lot ones were folks who had attended a number of schools and accumulated a rather large number of training hours before coming to us.
I would be straightforward with them in suggesting that perhaps flying wasn’t in the cards for them. It’s not a given that just because you want something you’re entitled to get it. Sometimes it was attitude, sometimes it was ability and most often a mix of the two. It was almost always initially met with anger or resentment, but occasionally with appreciation for getting an honest assessment.
However, flight training itself has developed into a process where you can, in fact, brute force your way through. And sometimes life is such that you can’t devote yourself to frequent training lessons and get through more quickly and less expensively. If that’s the case you have to accept that reality and realize that it’s going to take you a lot more money and many more hours because recency/currency is a major factor in how much time/money your training will take.
Everyone’s individual situation is unique however and self assessment is hard for all of us. Hopefully anyone who is facing the time/money challenge has access to someone they trust (and will listen to) who can give them some advice to help in making what is a very tough decision.
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
At my first commercial pilot job I'd estimate 10-20% of new FOs were asked to leave due to their lack of piloting skill. This is after working the ramp for a year while waiting for the spot and not flying.
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philaviate
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Maybe having them work the ramp for a year and forgetting everything they learnt in their vast 10 or so multi hours is a stupid idea for the industry.......
Hey doc, congrats on med school. Now please go be a hospital cleaner for two years before you can see a patient.......
Passed the bar? Well done, go be a clerk at the motor vehicle registry for two years, then you can be a real grown up lawyer who paid his dues.......
Sounds silly eh?
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
The real reason for ramp is cheap indentured labour.
And anyone knows that it’s all up to the trainer whether you pass or fail. I could sewer each and every one of you given the chance and I’m sure you could do the same to me. Whether it’s regs knowledge, obscure passages in the AFM or supplements, laser focus on instruments, or unfair emergencies (this isn’t a PPC).
I could pass almost anyone too depending on how desperate it is… the amount of times people have done single pilot in a two crew aircraft with a “project” is probably higher than most will admit.
They hire more people than there are spots for, and you can’t have people ramping forever or nobody will get their shot.
And anyone knows that it’s all up to the trainer whether you pass or fail. I could sewer each and every one of you given the chance and I’m sure you could do the same to me. Whether it’s regs knowledge, obscure passages in the AFM or supplements, laser focus on instruments, or unfair emergencies (this isn’t a PPC).
I could pass almost anyone too depending on how desperate it is… the amount of times people have done single pilot in a two crew aircraft with a “project” is probably higher than most will admit.
They hire more people than there are spots for, and you can’t have people ramping forever or nobody will get their shot.
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Meatservo
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Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Taking six years to complete your training is NOT necessarily a red flag to employers. If any employer asks what took so long, you tell them you were chipping away at it part-time alongside having a full-time job and other adult obligations. And that would be if they even ask. I think I would find that question absurd. I don’t believe I have ever been asked “so how long did it take to complete your training?”
If I'd known I was going to live this long, I'd have taken better care of myself
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
What he said. Took me a few years as well. Gradually chipping away at all the licenses. Nobody asked. I didn't even consider this could be considered 'bad'.Meatservo wrote: ↑Tue Dec 09, 2025 7:58 pm Taking six years to complete your training is NOT necessarily a red flag to employers. If any employer asks what took so long, you tell them you were chipping away at it part-time alongside having a full-time job and other adult obligations. And that would be if they even ask. I think I would find that question absurd. I don’t believe I have ever been asked “so how long did it take to complete your training?”
Think about it this way: some employers claim they like degrees, life experience and relevant non aviation experience. It takes time to acquire all that experience.
Now if you have a 6 year gap on your resume, 8 failed check rides, and 450 hours dual, then perhaps you might get a question or two.
As an AvCanada discussion grows longer:
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
-the probability of 'entitlement' being mentioned, approaches 1
-one will be accused of using bad airmanship
Re: Bad training experience has made me question finishing
Exactly this. I've had examiners tell me frankly that the regs are written strictly enough that they could basically fail whoever they want. They are just deciding if you are safe enough to be a pilot. The objectivity is nonsense, and it is just down to finding an honest examiner with integrity who won't let everyone pass, but also won't fail a student just to get home early. I've seen both cases, and it explains why we have such a wide array of pilots buzzing around.‘Bob’ wrote: ↑Sat Dec 06, 2025 8:33 pm The real reason for ramp is cheap indentured labour.
And anyone knows that it’s all up to the trainer whether you pass or fail. I could sewer each and every one of you given the chance and I’m sure you could do the same to me. Whether it’s regs knowledge, obscure passages in the AFM or supplements, laser focus on instruments, or unfair emergencies (this isn’t a PPC).
I could pass almost anyone too depending on how desperate it is… the amount of times people have done single pilot in a two crew aircraft with a “project” is probably higher than most will admit.
They hire more people than there are spots for, and you can’t have people ramping forever or nobody will get their shot.



