All add-on ratings
IR
Instrument Rating
The Instrument Rating (IR) is the most commercially significant add-on rating a pilot can hold. It authorises flight in Instrument Meteorological Conditions (IMC) and is a prerequisite for CPL and ATPL privileges in most authorities. The IR theory exam is one of the most demanding in pilot training, covering meteorology, radio navigation, flight planning, and IFR procedures in depth.
Duration
6–12 months
Typical cost
€7,000–€15,000
Requires
PPL(A) minimum
Exam topics
7 key areas
Prerequisites
- PPL (Aeroplane) or equivalent
- 50 hours cross-country PIC time
- English Language Proficiency Level 4+
- Valid Class 1 or Class 2 Medical
What you'll learn
IFR departure, en-route, and approach procedures
Instrument approach categories and minima
ILS, VOR, NDB, RNAV, and RNP approach procedures
High-altitude meteorology and icing
Holding patterns and missed approach procedures
ATC communications in IMC
Theory exam topics
These are the areas covered in the written theory exam for the IR.
- Instrument flight procedures (ICAO PANS-OPS)
- Radio navigation systems (ILS, VOR, NDB, DME, RNAV)
- Meteorology — fronts, icing, turbulence, forecasting products
- IFR flight planning and fuel requirements
- Altimetry and altimeter settings
- Human performance in IMC (spatial disorientation)
- Airspace structure and ATC procedures
Authority differences
EASA issues the IR(A) with both full and CB-IR (Competency Based) pathways. FAA issues the Instrument Rating (Airplane). Most other authorities offer an equivalent rating aligned to ICAO standards.