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Career Pathways: Exploring Exciting Opportunities in the Aviation Industry

From the flight deck of a Boeing to crop dusting at dawn — aviation careers are as varied as the pilots who fly them.

By Parrish AviationJune 16, 2023

Most people who start flight training have their sights on the airlines. That's a great goal — but it's far from the only career aviation has to offer. Here's a survey of the paths available to certificated pilots.

Airline Pilot

The most common career goal. Regional → Major. ATP certificate required for Captain; R-ATP for FO at qualifying operations.

Salary: $50k–$400k+ (varies widely by carrier and seniority)

Corporate / Charter Pilot

Flying executives or charter passengers in business jets and turboprops. Often faster advancement and better quality of life at well-run operations. NetJets, FlexJet, fractionals, and private operators.

Salary: $60k–$200k+ depending on operator

Certified Flight Instructor

Build hours while teaching others. The most common path to 1,500 hours. Can also be a rewarding long-term career for those who love teaching.

Salary: $40k–$70k/year (varies by school and ratings held)

Agricultural Aviation

Crop dusting and agricultural applications. Specialized, well-paid, physically demanding, and a unique flying environment. Low-altitude, high-workload operations.

Salary: $60k–$120k+ for experienced ag pilots

Air Medical / EMS Pilot

Helicopter or fixed-wing medical transport. Fast-paced, life-saving missions. Requires significant experience (typically 2,000+ hours) and often IFR proficiency.

Salary: $70k–$120k+ depending on operation

Government & Military

Military pilots fly some of the most advanced aircraft in the world. Government aviation includes border patrol, law enforcement, fire suppression, and more. Excellent training and career development.

Highly competitive entry; exceptional career development

Cargo Aviation

Flying freight for FedEx, UPS, Amazon Air, and regional cargo operators. Less passenger interaction, often better schedules at senior levels. Strong union contracts at major carriers.

Salary: comparable to or exceeding passenger airlines

The Common Foundation

Every one of these paths starts the same way: Private → Instrument → Commercial → CFI → build time. The differences emerge after you have your commercial certificate and begin accumulating hours. The fundamentals — aeronautical decision making, weather judgment, systems knowledge, precise aircraft control — apply in every cockpit.

At Parrish Aviation, we don't just train pilots. We help you understand where you're going and build the foundation to get there.

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