UK CAA PPL is no longer an EASA licence. Cannot fly EASA-registered aircraft. Can fly UK-registered (G-reg) in EASA states for temporary visits with limitations. For regular European flying: need EASA PPL (via conversion or fresh training) or dual licensing.
UK to EASA: apply to EASA state (Ireland IAA is popular), provide licence/logbook, pass 9 EASA theory exams, possibly a skill test. EASA to UK: apply to UK CAA (SRG3108), pass UK theory exams, possibly UK skill test. Well-established processes both ways.
For UK-based pilots who fly in Europe: yes, increasingly common. Dual licensing means flying both G-reg (UK) and EASA-reg aircraft. Downside: double admin (two theory exam sets, possibly two medicals, two sets of ratings). Worth it for frequent cross-system flyers.
UK CAA stopped issuing new LAPL(A). Existing holders retain privileges for UK-registered aircraft in UK airspace. UK LAPL NOT valid in EASA states (never ICAO-compliant). To fly in Europe: convert to EASA PPL/LAPL (requires exams and possibly skill test). Can transition to UK NPPL domestically.
Yes. Many German schools offer English-language training, especially near international airports. Theory exams available in English at LBA centres. FRTOL obtainable with English privileges. Confirm with school before enrolling. Schools in Hamburg, Munich, Berlin, Frankfurt commonly offer English.
ZUP (Zuverlassigkeitsuberprufung) is a mandatory security reliability check for all pilots training/flying in Germany. Completed before solo flying. Submit personal data, ID, and consent; authorities check criminal records and security databases. Processing: 2-8 weeks. Non-German EU citizens also subject to ZUP. Renewed every ~5 years.
Yes. ILT/KIWA administers EASA PPL exams in both Dutch and English. Popular choice due to efficient scheduling and accessibility. Other English-exam options: Austria (Austro Control), Ireland (IAA). Fees are per exam.
300+ VFR days/year, competitive rates (EUR130-180/hr), lower cost of living, VAT exemptions for professional training, many English-speaking schools (Fly EPT, FTEJerez, Quality Fly), and free choice of EASA State of Licence Issue regardless of training location.
Your SOLI is the state that administers your licence. Can differ from training country. Consider: administrative efficiency (Ireland IAA, Austria Austro Control known for speed), language (forms/correspondence), costs (issue fees vary), proximity. Once issued, licence is valid EASA-wide regardless of SOLI.
Yes — EASA PPL is ICAO-compliant. Common conversions: EASA to FAA (verification + written + checkride), EASA to Australian CASA, EASA to Transport Canada. Many countries accept EASA directly or with minimal validation for temporary visits.