FAR DECODED — TITLE 14 CFR

Eligibility Requirements: Airline Transport Pilots

Regulation Text

To be eligible for an airline transport pilot certificate, a person must:

(a) Meet the following age requirements:

(1) For an airline transport pilot certificate obtained under the aeronautical experience requirements of §§ 61.159, 61.161, or 61.163, be at least 23 years of age; or

(2) For an airline transport pilot certificate obtained under the aeronautical experience requirements of § 61.160, be at least 21 years of age.

(b) Be able to read, speak, write, and understand the English language. If the applicant is unable to meet one of these requirements due to medical reasons, then the Administrator may place such operating limitations on that applicant's pilot certificate as are necessary for the safe operation of the aircraft;

(c) Be of good moral character;

(d) Meet at least one of the following requirements:

(1) Holds a commercial pilot certificate with an instrument rating issued under this part;

(2) Meet the military experience requirements under § 61.73 of this part to qualify for a commercial pilot certificate, and an instrument rating if the person is a rated military pilot or former rated military pilot of an Armed Force of the United States; or

(3) Holds either a foreign airline transport pilot license with instrument privileges, or a foreign commercial pilot license with an instrument rating, that—

(i) Was issued by a contracting State to the Convention on International Civil Aviation; and

(ii) Contains no geographical limitations.

(e) For an airline transport pilot certificate with an airplane category multiengine class rating or an airline transport pilot certificate obtained concurrently with a multiengine airplane type rating, receive a graduation certificate from an authorized training provider certifying completion of the airline transport pilot certification training program specified in § 61.156 before applying for the knowledge test required by paragraph (g) of this section;

(f) Meet the aeronautical experience requirements of this subpart that apply to the aircraft category and class rating sought before applying for the practical test;

(g) Pass a knowledge test on the aeronautical knowledge areas of § 61.155(c) of this part that apply to the aircraft category and class rating sought;

(h) Pass the practical test on the areas of operation listed in § 61.157(e) of this part that apply to the aircraft category and class rating sought; and

(i) Comply with the sections of this subpart that apply to the aircraft category and class rating sought.

Research Notes

Regulatory Cross-References

§ 61.153 establishes the gate requirements for the ATP certificate. Applicants must be at least 23 years old (full ATP) or meet R-ATP age minimums per § 61.160, hold a commercial pilot certificate, hold an instrument rating, and meet the aeronautical experience requirements of §§ 61.159–61.163. First Class Medical Certificate required for acting as PIC in Part 121 operations.

Age Requirement: 23 vs. R-ATP Exception

The minimum age of 23 for a full ATP was established post-Colgan Air (2009). The R-ATP pathway under § 61.160 allows certain applicants to serve as SIC (Second-in-Command, i.e., First Officer) in Part 121 operations at age 21 with lower total hour requirements — but they cannot serve as PIC until they obtain a full ATP at age 23 with full 1,500 hours.

Key Authorities

  • Pub. L. 111-216 — minimum age and experience mandates for ATP
  • AC 61-65J — endorsement and certification guidance
  • 14 CFR § 61.31(e) — type rating requirements for ATP holders in multi-crew aircraft

CFI Commentary

Highlighted phrases in the regulation text above link to instructor notes at the bottom of this page. Look for the amber or blue highlights — each one flags a gotcha or a pro tip worth knowing.

Amendment History

Amendment History Coming Soon

Every time this regulation changes, we'll record it here — the date, what was amended, and a plain-English summary of what shifted.

AOA Notes

These notes correspond to the highlighted phrases in the regulation text above. Each one flags something worth knowing — a common misread, a checkride gotcha, or a practical pro tip.

Gotcha: You cannot hold a full ATP until 23 — but R-ATP FO work starts at 21
This comes up constantly for students tracking toward the airlines. The R-ATP allows you to be a First Officer at a regional airline at age 21 if you meet the qualifying pathways — but you're operating under restricted privileges. You cannot be named as PIC (Captain) in Part 121 operations until you turn 23 and hold a full ATP. Plan your career timeline around this: 18 private, 19-20 commercial + instrument, 21 R-ATP eligible, 23 full ATP. It's tight, but it works for the military and college program pathways.
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