Multi-Engine Piston Rating
The Multi-Engine Piston (MEP) rating authorises pilots to act as PIC on aircraft with more than one piston engine. It is a prerequisite for most CPL and ATPL flight training and is the standard stepping stone from a single-engine PPL to commercial flying. The MEP is primarily a practical rating — the theory exam is straightforward, but the flying skills (particularly asymmetric handling after engine failure) must be demonstrated to a high standard.
Duration
2–4 weeks
Typical cost
€3,500–€6,000
Requires
PPL(A) or CPL(A)
Exam topics
7 key areas
Prerequisites
- PPL(A) or CPL(A)
- Valid Class 1 or Class 2 Medical
- Instrument proficiency recommended
What you'll learn
Theory exam topics
These are the areas covered in the written theory exam for the MEP.
- Multi-engine aerodynamics — Vmca, Vyse, Vxse
- Critical engine and P-factor
- Engine failure on takeoff and in flight
- OEI performance — climb gradient, service ceiling
- Propeller systems — feathering, unfeathering, autofeather
- Fuel systems — cross-feed, balance, management
- Systems differences from single-engine aircraft
Authority differences
EASA issues the MEP(Land) class rating via a Skill Test. FAA issues the Multi-Engine Land (MEL) rating. The rating is aircraft-class specific — a MEP does not cover multi-engine turbine aircraft.