United, Delta, and American Airlines are battling the pilot shortage by fast-tracking trainees

In this Feb. 5, 2019, file photo a ramp worker guides a Delta Air Lines plane at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Seattle.
Major carriers are trying new tricks to recruit badly needed pilots. AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File

  • To deal with a debilitating pilot shortage, major airlines are launching training programs.
  • Some airline programs can take candidates from high school to a Boeing or Airbus jet in five years.
  • Candidates who graduate from these programs can get streamlined paths to top jobs.

American airlines are facing a very real shortage of people who can fly their planes, and it's not just because an estimated 5,000 US airline pilots retired early during the pandemic as their employers raced to slash costs.

"Right now the big airlines have a need for 5,000 to 6,000 pilots a year," Kit Darby, a retired United captain and industry hiring consultant, told Insider this summer.

Desperate to fill cockpits, America's four largest carriers — American, Delta, United, and Southwest — have in recent years launched programs to find pilots and fast-track their careers. In an industry in which fliers typically pay for their training, the carriers started offering to help them with loans and scholarships.

American's Cadet program, like Delta's Propel, Southwest's Destination 225, and United's Aviate, started by finding private pilots or military pilots interested in a quick, intensive training path. Those candidates would earn their ratings and gain experience as flight instructors or corporate pilots or fly with regional airlines until they logged enough hours to fly for a major carrier.

In recent years, some airlines have gone further by launching ab initio (Latin for "from the beginning") programs that can take candidates from the streets — or even high-school graduations — to the first officer's seat of a big Boeing or Airbus jet in five years or less.

United's program has gone the furthest down the ab initio road. Last year, the airline bought a flight school in Deer Valley, Arizona, near Phoenix; the first 20 students entered Aviate Academy this fall. While they learn, build flight hours, and earn their college degrees (from a degree-granting school, which Aviate is not), they won't have to make payments on their United-arranged loans.

Candidates don't need even a basic private pilot's license to join these programs, which can give them streamlined paths to top jobs if they complete their training, obtain the required licenses, and log 1,500 flight hours, a process that takes four to five years.

United will even kick-start their climb by paying the $17,500 cost of obtaining their basic private pilot's license. Some wannabe flyers can get their license at nonaffiliated programs for less than that, but they won't get a valuable shortcut to a job with United or another major carrier.

For the candidates selected by United or the other carriers, the rewards can be huge. While training and building up enough flight hours typically can cost $150,000 to $200,000 over a 25-year career, the average airline pilot will earn about $11 million in salary, benefits, and retirement, Darby said.

American, which, like Delta and Southwest, works through several affiliated flight schools but has not bought or launched its own, is every bit as thirsty for new pilots. A spokesperson said American expected to hire 350 new pilots by year's end and another 1,000 or more in 2022. The Cadet program, she said, would put new hires on a "path from day one with zero time or experience to the right seat" at one of the regional airlines American owns, adding that they could be flying for American itself two years after that.

Still, this takes time. Right now, United's academy can take on only 20 pilots a month, though it plans to double that over time. Even then, Capt. Curt Brunjes, who runs the Aviate program, told Insider that the academy must keep growing if it is to reach its goal of producing half of the 10,000 pilots United expects to hire over the next decade.

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