A&P Mechanic Continuing Education: Staying Current in 2026
Your A&P certificate never expires — it's good for life once earned. But that doesn't mean your skills stay current on their own. Aviation technology evolves constantly: new aircraft types, new composite materials, new avionics systems, new regulations, and new maintenance practices. Mechanics who don't stay current get left behind.
Here's how to keep your skills sharp and your career advancing in 2026.
Why Continuing Education Matters
- Technology changes: Modern aircraft (787, A350, A220) use different materials, systems, and construction methods than legacy aircraft
- Regulatory updates: The FAA issues new ADs, advisory circulars, and regulatory changes regularly
- Employer expectations: Airlines and MROs expect mechanics to stay current, especially on systems they maintain
- Career advancement: Promotions to lead, inspector, or management roles require demonstrated knowledge growth
- IA renewal: IA holders must complete annual refresher training to maintain their authorization
Types of Continuing Education
1. Manufacturer Training Courses
OEM courses are the gold standard for system-specific knowledge:
| Manufacturer | Training Programs |
|---|---|
| Boeing | Boeing Training & Flight Services (multiple locations) |
| Airbus | Airbus Training Centre (Miami, Toulouse, global) |
| GE Aerospace | Engine-specific maintenance courses |
| Pratt & Whitney | Customer Training Center (various) |
| Honeywell | Learning & Development (Phoenix, global) |
| Collins Aerospace | System-specific training |
| Garmin | Avionics certification courses |
| Textron Aviation | Cessna/Beechcraft maintenance courses |
These courses typically cost $1,000–$5,000+ and last 3–10 days. Many employers pay for manufacturer training as part of professional development.
2. FAA Safety Team (FAASTeam) Events
The FAA's safety outreach program offers free seminars, webinars, and workshops:
- Available through FAASafety.gov
- Covers regulatory updates, safety practices, maintenance topics
- Earns WINGS credits (pilot-focused but some maintenance content)
- Free and frequent
3. IA Refresher Courses
Required annually for IA holders. Typically 8-hour seminars covering:
- Regulatory updates (Part 43, Part 91 changes)
- AD and airworthiness directive compliance
- Inspection best practices
- Case studies of maintenance-related accidents
Organizations that offer IA refresher courses include PAMA, FAASTeam, and various Part 147 schools.
4. Industry Conferences and Trade Shows
| Event | Focus | When |
|---|---|---|
| MRO Americas | MRO industry, heavy maintenance | April (annually) |
| NBAA-BACE | Business aviation (maintenance track) | October |
| HAI Heli-Expo | Helicopter maintenance and operations | March |
| AEA International Convention | Avionics, electronics | March/April |
| EAA AirVenture Oshkosh | General aviation, experimental | July |
These events offer technical sessions, vendor demonstrations, networking, and professional development credits.
5. NDT Certifications
Non-Destructive Testing certifications add significant value:
| NDT Method | Level I | Level II | Level III |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visual Testing (VT) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
| Liquid Penetrant (PT) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
| Magnetic Particle (MT) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
| Ultrasonic (UT) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
| Eddy Current (ET) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
| Radiographic (RT) | Basic | Independent | Program management |
Levels are defined by ASNT (American Society for Nondestructive Testing) and NAS 410 (aerospace-specific).
6. Online and Self-Study
| Resource | Type | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| FAA Advisory Circulars | Free PDFs from FAA | Free |
| Aviation Maintenance Technology (AMT) magazine | Industry publication | Free/subscription |
| Aircraft Maintenance Technology Podcast | Audio learning | Free |
| ATEC training webinars | Industry association | Free–$50 |
| PAMA (Professional Aviation Maintenance Association) | Association membership + resources | $75–$150/year |
Creating a Continuing Education Plan
Annual Learning Checklist:
- Complete at least one manufacturer training course (or employer-provided type-specific training)
- Attend at least one FAASTeam event or webinar
- Read all new ADs relevant to aircraft types you maintain
- Review any regulatory changes to Part 43, Part 65, or Part 145 (annually)
- Attend or view content from one industry conference
- Complete IA refresher course (if IA holder)
- Pursue one new certification or rating (NDT, FCC GROL, composite repair, etc.)
- Subscribe to at least one aviation maintenance publication
- Network with mechanics at other organizations (learn what they're seeing)
Employer-Sponsored Training
Most airlines and large MROs offer:
- In-house training departments with scheduled courses
- Tuition reimbursement for external training (often up to $5,000/year)
- Apprenticeship and skills progression programs
- Cross-training on new aircraft types as the fleet evolves
If your employer offers training, take advantage of every opportunity. Saying "I'm too busy" is short-sighted — the mechanics who advance fastest are the ones who continuously learn.
The Bottom Line
Your A&P certificate opened the door. Continuing education keeps it open and pushes you up the ladder. In a field changing as fast as aviation, the mechanics who invest in their own development will always be in demand.
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