Aircraft Mechanic Pay by State
Aircraft Mechanic Salary in Arkansas (2026)
Real A&P pay, Part 147 schools, and how to start — from US Trade Route, built by a working tradesman. Updated July 2026.
Little Rock is a business-jet town — Dassault Falcon Jets get completed and serviced here, and that completion center is one of the biggest bizjet employers in the country. It's quiet-market Arkansas pay on the low end, but the specialized completion and MRO work climbs fast.
Arkansas Aircraft Mechanic Pay Range
$45-85k
⚙ Bizjet completion work pushes higher
The A&P Pay Ladder
Aircraft mechanic pay climbs with your certificate and your seat. New A&Ps start on the line or in the hangar; experienced mechanics add type experience and shift premiums; the top of the ladder is lead positions and the Inspection Authorization (IA) — and at airlines and cargo carriers, license premiums and union scale stack on top of all of it.
New A&P Mechanic$45k
Experienced A&P$66k
Lead / Inspector (IA)$88k+
Before You Decide
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Who Hires Aircraft Mechanics in Arkansas
Airlines, MRO shops, cargo carriers, manufacturers, and business-aviation service centers are where A&Ps work — and in Arkansas, these are the names mechanics know, based on reviews from mechanics in the field.
Dassault Falcon Jet (Little Rock)★ 4.0 (12 reviews)
Central Flying Service (Little Rock)★ 3.8 (6 reviews)
A&P Schools & Training in Arkansas
The standard route is an FAA Part 147 school — 12-24 months, roughly 1,900 curriculum hours, typically $20-50k (community-college programs run far less). Most Part 147 schools accept the GI Bill. Rosters change — always confirm a school's current programs directly.
University of Arkansas — Pulaski Technical CollegeAviation Maintenance Technology
How to Become an Aircraft Mechanic in Arkansas
The path is federal, applied locally: graduate an FAA Part 147 program (or document 30 months of hands-on experience — the route most military mechanics use), then pass the FAA written, oral, and practical exams for the Airframe and Powerplant ratings. That A&P certificate is a federal license good in all 50 states — no four-year degree at any step.
For the complete step-by-step — costs, the experience route, and what the exams cover — read our full guide to becoming an aircraft mechanic. Thinking about the cockpit instead? See the pilot guide.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much do aircraft mechanics make in Arkansas?
Aircraft mechanics in Arkansas earn roughly $45-85k depending on employer and experience. New A&Ps start around $45k, experienced mechanics reach $66k, and lead mechanics or inspectors (IA) at airlines and cargo carriers clear $88k+ with license premiums and shift differentials. Bizjet completion work pushes higher.
How long does it take to become an aircraft mechanic in Arkansas?
The standard route is an FAA Part 147 school — 12-24 months and roughly 1,900 curriculum hours — then the FAA written, oral, and practical exams for the Airframe and Powerplant ratings. The alternative is documenting 30 months of hands-on experience, the path most military mechanics use.
Do you need a degree to be an aircraft mechanic in Arkansas?
No. The A&P is a federal certificate, not a degree — you qualify through a Part 147 school (typically $20-50k, far less at community colleges) or documented experience, then pass the FAA exams. Most Part 147 schools accept the GI Bill.
Where do Arkansas aircraft mechanics train and work?
A&P and aviation maintenance programs in Arkansas include University of Arkansas — Pulaski Technical College. Hiring nearby: Dassault Falcon Jet (Little Rock), Central Flying Service (Little Rock).