KatanaHawk
Well-Known Member
Since I started flying I have been faced with the reality that it's expensive (duh) and that it takes years to make a livable wage. I've wanted to fly all my life (and still do, the last decade of struggling in aviation hasn't killed my motivation yet), so I took out the requisite loans and did my training, and am now working at a fairly decent CFI job while I build enough time to start my experience dealing with the dreaded first year FO pay. Still, it's not easy, those loan payments combined with the cost of living are crushing, there's only so much you can cut back and only so much ramen one can eat. I'm sure this is something we have all faced at one time or another.
The truth of the industry is that, at least starting out, pilots are severely underpaid, and the only semi-feasible way to get the required flight time required for the higher paying jobs is to find the least demeaning time-building job you can and pay your dues. CFI pay or the first few years as a regional FO cannot support someone without special circumstances (i.e., no family and/or financially supportive parents, no student loans, etc). I know we all (or, most of us at least, as far as I know) are fighting for higher starting pay in the ways we can, while balancing the need to eat and pay bills.
I know the above topic has been debated endlessly, and that's not really the point of my post. I'd like to move beyond that for a second and see what all y'alls have done or plan to do (side gigs/secondary income streams) to get to a livable position while working in the industry. I'm curious as to what stories and differing backgrounds and paths we all have taken.
While my secondary background is in computer science, most of my side income has come through a couple of retail jobs (which really cuts down on the time one is available to fly and prolongs this whole process). My dream has been to do some sort of freelance web development on the side, but that's still a work in progress. What have you done to get through your first few years working in aviation?
The truth of the industry is that, at least starting out, pilots are severely underpaid, and the only semi-feasible way to get the required flight time required for the higher paying jobs is to find the least demeaning time-building job you can and pay your dues. CFI pay or the first few years as a regional FO cannot support someone without special circumstances (i.e., no family and/or financially supportive parents, no student loans, etc). I know we all (or, most of us at least, as far as I know) are fighting for higher starting pay in the ways we can, while balancing the need to eat and pay bills.
I know the above topic has been debated endlessly, and that's not really the point of my post. I'd like to move beyond that for a second and see what all y'alls have done or plan to do (side gigs/secondary income streams) to get to a livable position while working in the industry. I'm curious as to what stories and differing backgrounds and paths we all have taken.
While my secondary background is in computer science, most of my side income has come through a couple of retail jobs (which really cuts down on the time one is available to fly and prolongs this whole process). My dream has been to do some sort of freelance web development on the side, but that's still a work in progress. What have you done to get through your first few years working in aviation?