Pilot Pay by State

Pilot Salary in North Carolina (2026)

Real pay, flight schools, and how to start — from US Trade Route, built by a working tradesman. Updated July 2026.

North Carolina is airline country — with major hub and carrier operations based here, the pipeline from flight school to the airlines runs right through the state. Regionals recruit heavily, first-officer classes fill fast, and pay at the top of this trade is set by union contract, not geography (major-airline captains clear $300-450k+). Build your hours in North Carolina and the flying that hires is close to home.

North Carolina Commercial Pilot Pay Range

$57-168k
✈ Major-airline captains: $300-450k+

The Pilot Pay Ladder

Airline pay is set by union contract, so the big numbers barely change state to state — what changes is the flying around you. Here's the honest ladder: your first job is usually teaching (CFI), then regional airline, charter, ag, or air-medical flying while your hours build, then the majors.

Flight Instructor (CFI)$35-65k
Regional FO / Charter / Ag$90-120k
Major-Airline Captain$300k+
Before You Decide
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Who Hires Pilots in North Carolina

Regionals, charters, air-medical, tour, and ag operators are where new commercial pilots build hours — and where a lot of great careers stay. These are hiring pipelines North Carolina pilots know, based on reviews from pilots in the field.

American Airlines (CLT hub)★ 4.5 (24 reviews)
PSA Airlines (CLT base)★ 4.0 (14 reviews)
Piedmont Airlines★ 4.5 (22 reviews)

Flight Schools & Training in North Carolina

Two honest routes: an accelerated flight academy (12-24 months, zero to commercial + CFI, roughly $80-100k+) or a college aviation program (2-4 years, costs more, but cuts the airline hour requirement to 1,000-1,250 under R-ATP). Part 141 schools accept the GI Bill. Rosters change — always confirm a school's current programs directly.

Elizabeth City State UniversityAviation Science
Lenoir Community CollegeAviation Program
ATP Flight School (Charlotte/Raleigh)Airline Career Track

How to Become a Pilot in North Carolina

The path is federal, applied locally: medical certificate first (make sure you can pass an FAA Class 1 medical before spending a dime), then private license → instrument rating → commercial certificate (~250 hours) → instructor ratings. Teach or fly charter/ag/tours to 1,500 hours (less with a degree), pass your ATP, and the airlines are hiring. No four-year degree required at any step.

For the complete step-by-step — costs, financing, and every license explained — read our full guide to becoming a pilot, plus the airline career path, ag pilot guide, and helicopter pilot guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do pilots make in North Carolina?
Commercial pilots in North Carolina — charter, air medical, tours, instruction, ag — earn roughly $57-168k depending on the flying and your hours. Airline pay is set by union contract nationwide: regional first officers start around $90-120k, and major-airline captains earn $300-450k+.
How long does it take to become a pilot in North Carolina?
Zero to commercial pilot with instructor ratings runs about 12-24 months at an accelerated academy. Most pilots then instruct or fly charter/ag to build to 1,500 flight hours (1,000-1,250 with an aviation degree) — about 2-4 years total from first lesson to an airline seat.
Do you need a degree to be a pilot in North Carolina?
No. Airlines hire on flight hours and certificates, not diplomas. A four-year aviation degree only shortens the airline hour requirement (R-ATP: 1,000-1,250 hours instead of 1,500). Training costs roughly $80-100k+ from zero to commercial — financing exists, and Part 141 schools accept the GI Bill.
Where do North Carolina pilots train and work?
Flight schools and college aviation programs in North Carolina include Elizabeth City State University and Lenoir Community College. Hour-building and hiring nearby: American Airlines, PSA Airlines, Piedmont Airlines.