In this article
Welcome to the flight deck
For many people, flying is the dream job โ and being a pilot is exactly the mix of skill, responsibility, and adventure it looks like. But it's also a serious profession with demanding training, big upfront costs, and a lifestyle of rosters and time away. Whether you're chasing the dream or weighing the reality, this guide covers the training, the day-to-day, the earnings, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A pilot operates an aircraft safely, navigating it and its passengers or cargo from departure to destination, and managing everything that happens in between. In simple terms: they're responsible for the aircraft, the people on board, and every decision in the air. Most of the job is monitoring, planning, and judgement โ with the critical moments being takeoff, landing, and the unexpected.
- Plan flights, fuel, weather, and routes
- Operate and monitor the aircraft and its systems
- Communicate with air traffic control and crew
- Make safety-critical decisions, calmly and correctly
Key skills & qualifications
Technical skills
Soft skills
- Calm decision-making โ clear judgement under pressure, on limited time
- Situational awareness โ holding the whole picture at once
- Communication & teamwork โ the flight deck runs on crew coordination
- Discipline โ checklists and procedures exist to keep everyone alive
- Focus & stamina โ long duties and time-zone changes
- Responsibility โ hundreds of lives can rest on your decisions
Education & licensing
Becoming an airline pilot means extensive, expensive flight training and licensing โ building from a private licence to a commercial and then an airline transport licence (ATPL), plus type ratings, medicals, and recurrent checks throughout your career.
Typical duties on a flight
- Pre-flight planning โ weather, route, fuel, weight, and briefings
- Checks โ walk-around and methodical checklists before every flight
- Takeoff & departure โ among the most demanding, hands-on phases
- Cruise monitoring โ managing systems, fuel, and any changes
- Approach & landing โ the critical, high-workload arrival phase
- Communication โ constant coordination with ATC and cabin crew
Responsibilities by seniority
Cadet / Junior First Officer
Newly licensed
- Flying as co-pilot
- Building hours and experience
- Learning the airline's operations
- Supervised by senior captains
- Mastering the aircraft type
First Officer
Experienced co-pilot
- Sharing flying duties
- Handling complex routes
- Strong systems knowledge
- Building toward command
- Mentoring cadets
Captain
Command
- Final authority for the flight
- Leading the crew
- Critical decision-making
- Top of the pay scale
- Training / examiner roles
Where pilots fly
โ๏ธ Short-haul airlines
Multiple flights a day, home most nights โ busy, hands-on flying.
๐ Long-haul airlines
Intercontinental routes, layovers abroad, and time-zone life.
๐ฆ Cargo
Freight operations, often at night โ steady and in growing demand.
๐ฉ๏ธ Business & private jets
Flexible, high-end flying for corporate and private clients.
๐ Helicopter & specialist
Offshore, rescue, and utility flying โ distinct, skilled niches.
๐ Flight instruction
Teaching the next generation โ a common way to build early hours.
A day in the life
โ๏ธ Short-haul
- Early starts, multiple sectors
- Busy, hands-on flying
- Home most nights
- Tight turnarounds
- Fast-paced days
๐ Long-haul
- Fewer, longer flights
- Layovers in other countries
- Jet lag and time zones
- Extended cruise monitoring
- Days away from home
Report for an early short-haul duty; you and the captain plan the day's flights, study the weather, and calculate fuel.
Walk-around, checklists, and pushback; takeoff demands total focus.
Cruise: monitoring systems, talking to ATC, and a calm, steady watch.
Approach into busy airspace with a crosswind โ the part that earns the salary. Midday โ Turnaround and do it again.
Final landing, paperwork, and debrief. Most of the job is routine and procedural โ but you're trusted with hundreds of lives, and the moments that matter, you handle. That responsibility, and the view, are the appeal.
What this job gives you
- Excellent earnings โ especially as a captain on a major airline
- Travel & adventure โ the world becomes your workplace
- Prestige โ one of the most admired and aspirational careers
- Real responsibility โ a job that genuinely matters, every flight
- A unique lifestyle โ blocks of days off and a view from "the office"
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- High pay, especially as captain
- Travel and unique lifestyle
- Prestige and admiration
- Strong long-term demand
- Genuine responsibility and skill
- Blocks of days off
- Globally portable licence
โ Disadvantages
- Very expensive training upfront
- Irregular rosters and early starts
- Time away from home
- Fatigue and time-zone strain
- High responsibility and scrutiny
- Industry sensitive to downturns
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Build hours โ instructing or regional flying to gain experience
- First officer โ join an airline and fly the line
- Captain โ gain command, the big step in pay and responsibility
- Wide-body / long-haul โ larger aircraft and higher pay
- Training captain / examiner โ develop and check other pilots
- Management & safety โ chief pilot, operations, and safety roles
Pilot vs related transport & aviation roles
Aviation has several distinct careers. Here's how the neighbours compare.
| Role | Core focus | Key skills | Pay vs pilot | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pilot You are here |
Flying aircraft safely | Flying, judgement, systems | Baseline | Hard / costly |
| Air traffic controller | Guiding aircraft safely from the ground | Focus, spatial, comms | Similar | Hard |
| Cabin crew | Passenger safety and service | Service, safety, calm | Lower | Accessible |
| Aircraft engineer | Maintaining and certifying aircraft | Engineering, precision | Similar | Medium |
| Truck driver | Moving freight by road | Driving, logistics | Lower | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by airline, aircraft, and seniority.
Future outlook
Despite decades of "automation will replace pilots" talk, commercial aircraft still require two qualified pilots โ and will for the foreseeable future. Autopilot handles routine cruise; humans handle the planning, the judgement, and everything that goes wrong. With air travel growing and many pilots retiring, the industry forecasts a significant long-term shortage.
- A forecast global shortage of pilots over the coming decades
- Air travel demand keeps growing long-term
- Automation assists but doesn't remove the need for pilots
- Cargo and low-cost travel expand opportunities
- The industry remains cyclical โ sensitive to shocks and downturns
Fun facts ๐ค
Many airlines require the two pilots to eat different meals โ so that if one is bad, the other pilot stays unaffected. Safety thinking runs deep.
Pilots train for emergencies far more than they ever face them โ endless simulator practice is exactly why aviation is so remarkably safe.
A long-haul pilot can have breakfast on one continent and dinner on another โ the lifestyle is genuinely unlike any office job.
Autopilot flies much of the cruise, but takeoff, complex approaches, and anything unexpected are firmly the pilots' job โ and always the pilots' responsibility.
Aviation English and phraseology are standardised worldwide โ pilots and controllers everywhere speak the same precise radio language.
Myths about being a pilot
"Autopilot does everything โ pilots just sit there."
โ False. Autopilot handles routine cruise. Pilots plan, decide, take off, land, and manage every abnormal situation โ and carry full responsibility throughout.
"It's a non-stop glamorous holiday."
โ False. Early starts, jet lag, time away from home, and constant checks are the reality behind the glamour.
"Pilots will be automated away soon."
โ False. Commercial flights require two qualified pilots, and that won't change for the foreseeable future.
"You need perfect eyesight and to be a maths genius."
โ False. You need to meet medical standards (often with correction) and solid, practical aptitude โ not superhuman traits.
"Anyone can afford the training."
โ Reality: The big honest hurdle is cost โ training is expensive, though cadet schemes and airline sponsorship can help.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Stay calm and decisive under pressure
- Are disciplined and detail-focused
- Love flying and travel
- Handle responsibility well
- Can fund or finance the training
- Are flexible about rosters and time away
โ Maybe not for you if...
- The training cost is out of reach
- You need a fixed 9-to-5 at home
- Time away from family is a dealbreaker
- You can't meet the medical standards
- High responsibility stresses you
- Irregular sleep would wreck you
Contract & specialist flying
Beyond a salaried airline seat, experienced pilots have options: contract flying, business and private jets, and specialist or instructor roles offer variety and, sometimes, premium pay.
โ Flexible routes โ upsides
- Contract roles can pay premiums
- Business/private jets offer variety
- Instructing builds hours and income
- See different aircraft and operations
- More control over your schedule
โ Flexible routes โ challenges
- Less stability than an airline seat
- Income varies with contracts
- Fewer benefits and pension
- Maintaining ratings and currency
- You manage your own career path
Recommended path: train, build hours (often by instructing), join an airline to gain experience and command, then consider contract, business-jet, or training roles if you want more variety later.
How to become a pilot
- Get a medical and research routes โ confirm you meet Class 1 medical standards, and compare flight schools and cadet schemes.
- Train for your licences โ work up from private to commercial to airline transport (ATPL), with exams and flight hours.
- Build hours โ many pilots instruct or fly regional/charter to gain experience.
- Get a type rating & first airline job โ qualify on a specific aircraft and join as a first officer.
- Build toward command โ gain experience and seniority to become a captain.
๐ธ What it actually costs to start
Realistic time and money to become an airline pilot. Figures are rough global guides โ training is genuinely expensive, though sponsorship can offset it.
What to know before you start
- The cost is the real barrier โ research cadet schemes and sponsorship before committing.
- Get your medical first โ confirm you meet Class 1 standards before spending a penny on training.
- The lifestyle is unusual โ rosters, early starts, and time away are part of the deal.
- It's mostly monitoring โ punctuated by the critical, skilled moments that matter.
- Discipline is the culture โ checklists and procedures are non-negotiable for a reason.
- The industry is cyclical โ demand is strong long-term but sensitive to shocks.
What pilots wish they'd known
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job. A few worth hearing before you start:
The training cost and the modest early pay shocked me โ it's a long financial investment before the captain salary arrives. If I'd understood the curve, I'd have planned my finances far better.
First officer ยท 4 years in, short-haul
People think it's glamour and autopilot. It's discipline, checklists, and being ready for the one flight in a thousand that goes wrong. That readiness is the actual job.
Captain ยท 14 years in, long-haul
The lifestyle is a real trade-off. The travel is incredible, but missing birthdays and living by a roster is hard. Go in loving flying enough to accept that side too.
Captain ยท 11 years in, cargo