FAR DECODED — TITLE 14 CFR

Glider and Ultralight Towing Requirements

Regulation Text

§ 61.69 Glider and unpowered ultralight vehicle towing: Experience and training requirements.

(a) No person may act as pilot in command for towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle unless that person—

(1) Holds a private, commercial or airline transport pilot certificate with a category rating for powered aircraft;

(2) Has logged at least 100 hours of pilot-in-command time in the aircraft category, class and type, if required, that the pilot is using to tow a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle;

(3) Has a logbook endorsement from an authorized instructor who certifies that the person has received ground and flight training in gliders or unpowered ultralight vehicles and is proficient in—

(i) The techniques and procedures essential to the safe towing of gliders or unpowered ultralight vehicles, including airspeed limitations;

(ii) Emergency procedures;

(iii) Signals used; and

(iv) Maximum angles of bank.

(4) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, has logged at least three flights as the sole manipulator of the controls of an aircraft while towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle, or has simulated towing flight procedures in an aircraft while accompanied by a pilot who meets the requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.

(5) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, has received a logbook endorsement from the pilot, described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section, certifying that the person has accomplished at least 3 flights in an aircraft while towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle, or while simulating towing flight procedures; and

(6) Within 24 calendar months before the flight has—

(i) Made at least three actual or simulated tows of a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle while accompanied by a qualified pilot who meets the requirements of this section; or

(ii) Made at least three flights as pilot in command of a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle towed by an aircraft.

(b) Any person who, before May 17, 1967, has made and logged 10 or more flights as pilot in command of an aircraft towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle in accordance with a certificate of waiver need not comply with paragraphs (a)(4) and (a)(5) of this section.

(c) The pilot, described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section, who endorses the logbook of a person seeking towing privileges must have—

(1) Met the requirements of this section prior to endorsing the logbook of the person seeking towing privileges; and

(2) Logged at least 10 flights as pilot in command of an aircraft while towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle.

(d) If the pilot described in paragraph (a)(4) of this section holds only a private pilot certificate, then that pilot must have—

(1) Logged at least 100 hours of pilot-in-command time in airplanes, or 200 hours of pilot-in-command time in a combination of powered and other-than-powered aircraft; and

(2) Performed and logged at least three flights within the 12 calendar months preceding the month that pilot accompanies or endorses the logbook of a person seeking towing privileges—

(i) In an aircraft while towing a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle accompanied by another pilot who meets the requirements of this section; or

(ii) As pilot in command of a glider or unpowered ultralight vehicle being towed by another aircraft.

[Docket FAA-2001-11133, 69 FR 44866, July 27, 2004, as amended by Amdt. 61-124, 74 FR 42555, Aug. 21, 2009]

Research Notes

Research Notes

§ 61.69 covers towing requirements for gliders and unpowered ultralight vehicles. AC 61-69C: Glider Towing Operations — the primary guidance document for this operation, covering signals, tow procedures, and emergency procedures. AIM 4-3-6: Tow plane procedures and right-of-way. NTSB relevance: Several fatal tow accidents have involved pilots who met the minimum hour requirements but lacked recent towing experience — currency matters more than minimums here. Insurance note: Many insurers require more than the FAA minimum for tow pilot coverage. AC 61-69C — FAA

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

2016-12-30
Substantive amendment to § 61.69. Amendment date: 2016-12-30; issue date: 2017-01-01.
Amendment: 61.69
2016-12-30
Non-substantive update to § 61.69. Re-issued 2023-03-31 (editorial/formatting only).
Amendment: 61.69
2016-12-30
Non-substantive update to § 61.69. Re-issued 2025-04-09 (editorial/formatting only).
Amendment: 61.69

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: The 100-Hour PIC Requirement Is Category-Wide
To tow a glider, you need 100 hours PIC in the category of the tow plane — meaning in powered aircraft, not necessarily in the specific make and model. But you also need a high-performance or complex endorsement if the tow plane qualifies. Before you show up to tow on a busy fly-in weekend, make sure your logbook documents every hour.
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Gotcha: Currency for Towing Resets Every 12 Months
The three towing flights required to maintain towing currency must be completed in the preceding 12 months. Let that window slip and you need to get signed off again — same training requirement, no grandfathering for years of prior towing experience. This catches a lot of pilots who tow seasonally and then resume in spring without verifying their currency.
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Pro Tip: The Ground Observation Requirement Is Often Overlooked
Before you can tow, you need to observe a ground tow-target release. In practice, this means watching an experienced tow pilot do at least one tow from the ground. It's one of the quieter requirements — not obviously stamped in the reg — but it's there, and a DPE checking your endorsement will look for it.
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