Do all trainee Airline pilots pay for the cost of becoming qualified Pilots?

Do all trainee Airline pilots pay for the cost of becoming qualified Pilots?

No, because many have been trained in the military and the cost of converting military experience into a civilian pilot certificate is minimal. However, among civilian-trained pilots, about 80% of them world wide still pay for their own training, and in the USA it's nearly 100%. In other countries about 20% of pilots (primarily in Asia) are trained under airline-sponsored ab-initio programs and many of those must pay back part of their training costs over time.

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MOST of them do… Either by paying for their own flight instruction, or by committing at least 10 years of their life to military service so they can receive training from the military.

YES! But some Airline may repay them after they pass the coarse.

No.

1. Some people get their licenses in fewer hours than others. Fewer hours = less $
2. Some people get their training through the military. If you go through the military, you pay for your training by serving time in the military (10 years), not with money.
3. Costs of becoming a pilot is different in each country.
4. To become an airline pilot, you need a lot of flight experience. Most of that flight experience will be earned doing flight jobs (ex: flight instructor, towing ads, lifting skydivers, etc.), but some of that will also be earned by flying just for fun. More non-work flying = more $ spent.

No, most commercial pilots are former military pilots, that got paid to learn an get flight hours.

Many join airlines after military service.

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