Earning a Private Pilot License is the moment flying shifts from a dream into a logbook entry with your name at the top. The PPL is the entry point into European general aviation: the license that lets you rent a Cessna or Piper on a Saturday morning, plan a cross-country to a grass strip in the next country, and carry your family along without paying for the privilege. It is also the first formal credential that every European airline captain has earned — everything above the PPL builds on the skills, habits, and medical fitness established here.
How long does PPL training take?
The EASA Part-FCL minimum is 45 flight hours, split across 25 hours of dual instruction with a certified flight instructor and 10 hours of solo flight, with the remaining hours distributed between solo cross-country navigation and exam preparation. Full-time integrated programs compress this into roughly 6 weeks of intensive daily flying, while most students training on weekends finish in 3–8 months. If you can only fly every other weekend and the weather is poor, plan on 9–12 months to checkride-ready.
Progression matters more than calendar time. Students who fly at least twice per week retain the motor-memory needed for landings and emergency procedures; those who stretch lessons to once a month repeat material and drift past the 45-hour minimum, adding cost without adding competence. When comparing schools, ask what their average total hours to checkride are — 50–55 hours is normal and realistic; claims of "everyone finishes in 45" are marketing, not reality.
How much does PPL training cost in Europe?
Budget €15,000 to €25,000 for a modular PPL in most European countries. The Netherlands, Switzerland, and the Nordic states sit at the upper end; Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic tend to offer the lowest total costs. In the middle tier you will find flight schools in Germany and France, typically running €18,000–22,000 for the full license.
The quoted price rarely captures the full picture. Ask each school for an itemized breakdown: aircraft rental per hour (wet or dry), instructor fee per hour, landing fees, examiner fees for the skill test, theoretical knowledge exam fees (set by the national CAA), the medical certificate, headset and flight bag, charts, and study materials. A €17,000 headline price with €2,000 in add-ons is more expensive than a €18,500 all-inclusive package.
What medical certificate do I need?
A valid EASA Class 2 medical certificate is mandatory before your first solo flight. The exam is conducted by an authorised Aviation Medical Examiner, not a general practitioner — only AMEs hold the EASA authorisation to issue pilot medicals. Expect to spend one to two hours in their office for the initial exam: medical history review, vision and colour perception testing, pure-tone audiometry, blood pressure, ECG, urinalysis, and a neurological screen.
Validity depends on age. Under 40, the Class 2 is valid for 60 months. From age 40 to 50, it renews every 24 months. From age 50 onwards, it is annual. Minor conditions — corrected vision, well-controlled blood pressure, lifestyle-managed cholesterol — are not disqualifying. Serious conditions may require additional specialist reports, and some lead to an Operational Multi-Pilot Limitation (OML) rather than outright refusal. If you are at all unsure about a condition, see the medical requirements pillar or book an informal consultation with an AME before committing to flight training.
What subjects does the PPL theory exam cover?
EASA Part-FCL defines nine theoretical knowledge subjects for the PPL: Air Law, Aircraft General Knowledge, Flight Performance and Planning, Human Performance and Limitations, Meteorology, Navigation, Operational Procedures, Principles of Flight, and Communications. Each is examined separately at the national aviation authority (or a designated test centre), with multiple-choice question banks that most students prepare for through a licensed ground-school provider.
The nine subjects are sat across one or more sittings, and EASA allows up to 18 months from your first passed exam to complete all nine. You can bundle them into a single week of intensive study and exam marathon, or spread them across your flight training. Most students complete theory in parallel with the early flight lessons, since Air Law and Principles of Flight directly support pre-solo training, while Navigation and Meteorology come alive once you are flying cross-countries.
What happens after I earn my PPL?
A PPL is the beginning, not the end. The most common next additions are the Night Rating (typically 5 hours of additional training, opening up evening flights and extending your useful season), the Instrument Rating (IR) for flying in cloud and under air traffic control at airline-compatible levels, and a Class or Type Rating for a specific higher-performance aircraft. Each rating is additive: your licence gains endorsements as you meet the requirements.
Pilots aiming at an aviation career move on to the Commercial Pilot Career path, adding the CPL and frozen ATPL theory, a Multi-Engine Rating, and eventually a type rating on a specific jet. Pilots flying purely for recreation often stop at PPL + Night Rating + a tailwheel or aerobatic endorsement — plenty of licence to explore Europe at 100 knots for the rest of your life.
Whatever direction you choose, the logbook habits, decision-making patterns, and regulatory literacy you build during PPL training follow you forever. Browse our flight-school directory by country to find an ATO that matches your schedule, location, and training style, and start flying.