Sport Pilot to Private Pilot: Upgrade Path & Credit
What hours and training transfer when you upgrade from sport pilot to private pilot, and how much it actually saves.
Many sport pilots eventually upgrade to private. The good news: all your sport pilot hours count toward the private requirements. The catch: you still need to meet every individual private pilot requirement that sport pilot didn't cover.
What transfers (§61.109(a))
The private pilot certificate requires:
- 40 hours total flight time
- 20 hours dual instruction
- 10 hours solo (including 5 hours solo XC, 1 leg ≥150 NM with 3 landings at 3 different airports, 1 leg in Class B/C/D or with an operating tower)
- 3 hours dual cross-country
- 3 hours dual night, including a 100 NM XC and 10 takeoffs/landings to a full stop
- 3 hours of basic instrument
- 3 hours dual within 2 calendar months of the practical test
Your sport pilot hours apply to "40 hours total" and "20 hours dual" without restriction. Solo and XC hours apply too.
What you still have to do
- Add night training (3 hours dual + the night XC)
- Add 3 hours of basic instrument
- Add 5 hours of solo XC (your sport solo XC hours count)
- Get a third-class FAA medical or BasicMed
- Pass the Private Pilot ACS knowledge test (separate from the sport test)
- Pass the private pilot practical test
Realistic added cost
If you have a sport pilot certificate with ~40 hours and want to upgrade:
- Night training and instrument: 10-15 hours dual
- Cross-country solo: 5-10 hours
- Knowledge test: $175
- DPE: $700
- Medical: $150
Budget $3,500-5,500 to add the private pilot certificate on top of your sport pilot foundation.
When the upgrade makes sense
Upgrade if you want IFR, night currency, or to fly aircraft outside LSA limits (or post-MOSAIC, outside MOSAIC limits). If you only want recreational day VFR in modern LSA, sport pilot is enough — even after MOSAIC takes effect.
A4 supports both paths. See the fleet · Talk to us