You’ve cleared your CPL, passed your exams, completed your 200 hours, and finally received your licence. But now comes the real challenge—how do you build more flying hours in India without burning a hole in your pocket?
Hour-building is one of the most confusing stages for fresh commercial pilots. You need hours to get hired, but you need money to get those hours, and flying clubs in India are not cheap or easily available.
This guide breaks down smart, realistic, legal, and industry-approved ways to build flying hours after your CPL in India.
Safety is often a necessity for owners of private planes who do cross-country flying or long navigation routes for student pilots.
Benefits to you:
Prerequisites:
This practice is common and fully legal in India when logged correctly.
If you are thinking of a long-term career in aviation with regular flying hours, then the best choice is to become a Flight Instructor (FI) because it is indeed the smartest option.
Advantages of FI:
Airlines often prefer candidates with FI experience because they demonstrate strong flying discipline and excellent handling skills.
The minimum qualifications are:
In busy schools, instructors often build 50–90 hours a month.
Ferry flights are required when a flying school buys a new aircraft, sends one for maintenance, or shifts base.
These opportunities are rare but very valuable.
Many pilots go to the USA, South Africa, or the Philippines to build hours because:
The hours are accepted in India for your logbook as long as the school is FAA, SACAA, or CAAP-approved.
Mention that DGCA accepts hours only if logged as PIC/SIC as per aircraft type.
Some charter companies hire fresh CPL holders for small aircraft like:
This is possible mainly when you have:
Flying schools in India and abroad offer hour-building packages where you pay for bulk hours.
Not the cheapest, but reliable and DGCA-legal.
Many aviation clubs need pilots to:
In return, they offer discounted hours or priority flying slots.
This method requires patience and networking but works in real life.
Though less common in India, some companies hire pilots for:
They prefer pilots with:
These jobs help you build hours while earning.
With the growth of aviation startups (air taxis, charter apps, drone companies), some need pilots for:
These flights add valuable hours and multi-engine exposure.
Many private aircraft owners don’t have the time to fly regularly. If you build trust, they may:
This is completely legal if cost-sharing is transparent.
Sometimes, universities that offer aviation programs employ pilots for:
The salary is yours plus the flying hours logged.
Only hour-building will help if you:
Airlines prefer consistent recency to random hour-building.
Circumstances
Logging hours without actually flying
Such actions are illegal and may lead to the irrevocable cancellation of your CPL.
Always fly under:
Even though CPL minimum is 200 hours, airlines prefer:
Building hours post-CPL in India is not hassle-free but with excellent planning and networking it is completely doable. Whether you choose instruction, charter flying, ferry work, or hour-building abroad, every single hour matters. Consistency, recency, and discipline are the keys that take you from a fresh CPL to your first airline cockpit.
Fly smart, fly safe, and build your journey with patience — because the airport gate to your dream career opens only with experience and consistency.
For more such updates visit Aviation Blogs & News
Also Read:
Most Indian airlines expect candidates to have 200 hours (CPL minimum) plus strong flying skills. However, realistically, 250–300 hours gives you an advantage during airline assessments and simulator screenings.
The most cost-effective method in India is becoming a Flight Instructor (FI). You get paid while flying, and you can build 400–800 hours per year without paying for flight time.
Yes, safety pilot hours are legal only when logged correctly under DGCA rules. A safety pilot can log time during instrument flying or training flights, but the logging must be accurate and follow the flying school’s SOPs.
Yes. Flying hours from countries like the USA, South Africa, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia are accepted by DGCA as long as they are logged properly and meet DGCA recency and aircraft category requirements.
Yes, PPL hours can count toward the 200-hour CPL requirement, provided the hours meet recency rules and are endorsed by a DGCA-recognised flying school. However, airlines still look for overall flying quality, not just hour quantity.
Batch Start From 6th Jan & 10th Jan 2025
Batch Start From 10th Jan 2025
Batch Start From 10th Jan 2025