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The VSL Aviation PodcastAuthor: Seth Lake
A podcast on all things General Aviation from the team at VSL Aviation. Language: en Genres: Aviation, Education, Leisure Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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Breaking: 2025 Airman Statistics Reveal a Pilot Pipeline Nobody Expected
Episode 56
Wednesday, 8 April, 2026
The 2025 FAA Civil Airmen Statistics just dropped — and the numbers tell a story that contradicts nearly everything you've heard about the pilot shortage. Seth Lake, FAA Designated Pilot Examiner and airline pilot, digs into the raw data to show why record pilot production and declining airline hiring opportunity can exist at the same time, what it means for anyone working toward an airline career, and why your checkride record matters more now than it has in years. Interactive tools, the pilot retirement projection spreadsheet, and the raw FAA source data are all available at https://www.vsl.aero — check the numbers yourself. Chapters 00:00 — Introduction & why this episode is different 01:30 — The DPE wait time complaint: what prompted this research 03:00 — Record pilot production: the data DPEs are actually putting out 04:13 — FAA reform: what's changing with the examiner system 06:03 — The core argument: it's a demand spike, not a DPE shortage 07:10 — Pilot production is unsustainable: the math 07:21 — The retirement & hiring data: 12 major airlines, 2025–2035 10:12 — The three things airlines need to grow (demand, airplanes, infrastructure) 13:00 — Pilot hiring by growth scenario: 0%, 2%, and 5% 14:07 — The underlying issue nobody's talking about: the pilot training gold rush 15:16 — The blog & interactive tools at vsl.aero 16:03 — The 55,000 commercial pilot problem explained 17:08 — Walking through the queue calculator live 19:59 — Running the worst-case scenario: 20,000 pilots/year 21:38 — What the queue looks like by 2035 23:01 — Context: commercial production doubled in 10 years 24:13 — The traffic jam analogy: DPE shortage vs. demand spike 25:46 — What this means for pilots pursuing an airline career 26:14 — The historical norm: 11–12 years was always standard 27:07 — Closing thoughts: the data, not doom and gloom 28:10 — Final advice: clean record, be well-rounded, keep going







