JaceTheAce
Well-Known Member
Out in the Part 61 world, what do you guys usually do? I've heard of some flight instructors that don't and a few that do.
If it is an in-depth thing, yes. For a quick preview of the flight, no.
Ditto. Unless we're doing an official ground lesson, I don't usually charge for pre/post flight briefing. In the case of a longer (20-30+min.) pre/post flight briefing that involves a lot more complex teaching, then I usually charge for it. This is fairly infrequent though. I know what it's like to be a student with all the financial burden, and I'm not going to nickel and dime them with short pre/post flight briefings.
PanJet, if you and I worked at the same school and I charged my students for ALL the time I was being useful as an instructor, and you only charged for flight time, my student, looking after his financial interests, might leave me to go fly with you. This affects my bottom line, and we might have to go to the parking lot to talk it out.Seriously though, "nickel and diming" is a poor term to use in my opinion - it implies sort of a dishonesty or lack of integrity when it is anything but.
If I'm teaching, I charge. If I'm twiddling my thumbs while the student does things that could have been done earlier (W&B, weather, NOTAMS, performance planning), I charge.
If I'm drinking coffee, bsing, telling war stories, etc, I do not charge.
I tell them this up front.
I completely understand, but my situation is also a bit different. It sounds like where you work it is normal to charge for pre/post flight briefings, which is fine with me, and I would do the same thing if I worked there. However, it isn't really standard to do that where I work. Most of the time instructors here don't charge at all for pre/post flight briefings, so my charging .5 here and there would probably actually be shooting myself in the foot since I don't know any other instructor that does it here.
You are correct though, and I do charge for stuff like reviewing flight planning, teaching preflight on a new plane, etc. Like I said, however, where I work my superiors are more concerned about saving students' money rather than paying flight instructors (as can be evidenced by our pay rate), so it's not normal practice to charge a lot other than ground instruction or flight time.
Also, I apologize if my term "nickel and diming" implied some sort of dishonesty. I meant no harmful intentions by that statement.
Trust me, I know that aviation is not a business to sell yourself cheap and screw other pilots trying to earn a living. I would never intentionally take away business from other instructors/pilots by selling myself cheap.
where I work my superiors are more concerned about saving students' money rather than paying flight instructors (as can be evidenced by our pay rate)
Heck yes u should charge .3, anything longer than that charged accordingly. I didn't pay more for my aviation education than my undergrad education for nothing. I feel if we are teaching we should be paid what we deserve. Besides that we are all underpaid as CFI's. A friend of mines parents were asking me about flying lessons and how much they cost. When I told them what I cost per hour they both looked at me funny. Then his mother says "don't you think you should charge more than that to teach someone how to fly?! The neighbor charges twice what you do for dance lessons!" I was like...ummm yeah well it's like this.......![]()
I have a question though - do you charge when you are sitting there while the student is doing a test? e.g. the pre-solo written test.