Military Aviation Mechanic to Civilian A&P: How the Transition Works
If you're wrapping up military service with aviation maintenance experience, you're sitting on a goldmine of skills that civilian employers are desperate for. But translating your military training into an FAA A&P certificate requires some specific steps. The military doesn't simply give you an A&P on the way out the door.
Here's how the transition works.
Why Your Military Experience Matters
Military aviation mechanics are rigorously trained. You've worked on some of the most complex aircraft in the world — F-18s, C-130s, H-60s, CH-47s, C-17s, F-35s — in conditions civilian mechanics rarely encounter. That experience is genuinely valuable.
But here's the catch: the FAA doesn't automatically recognize your military training as meeting A&P requirements. You need to go through the FAA certification process, which involves documenting your experience and passing the same exams as civilian mechanics.
Pathways for Military Mechanics
Path 1: Experience-Based (14 CFR §65.77)
You can qualify for A&P testing based on your military maintenance experience without attending a Part 147 school.
Requirements:
- Airframe only: 18 months documented airframe maintenance experience
- Powerplant only: 18 months documented powerplant maintenance experience
- Both (A&P): 30 months total documented aviation maintenance experience
How to Document:
- Request your military training records (DD-214, VMET, training certificates)
- Complete FAA Form 8610-2 (Airman Certificate and/or Rating Application)
- Present documentation to an FAA-designated representative or FSDO
- The FAA evaluator will review your military records and determine if your experience meets the regulatory requirements
Path 2: Military Competency Test (FAA COOL Program)
The FAA has agreements with each military branch for credentialing assistance:
| Branch | Program |
|---|---|
| Army | USMAP (United States Military Apprenticeship Program) |
| Navy | Navy COOL (Credentialing Opportunities On-Line) |
| Air Force | AF COOL |
| Marines | Marine Corps COOL |
| Coast Guard | USCG equivalent programs |
These programs help document your experience and may waive certain portions of the testing process.
Path 3: Part 147 School with Military Credit
Some Part 147 schools accept military training as credit toward their program. This allows you to fast-track through the school, skipping topics you've already mastered, and focus on any civilian-specific areas you haven't covered.
Schools known for military-friendly programs:
- Spartan College of Aeronautics
- Aviation Institute of Maintenance (AIM)
- Baker College
- Various community college programs
Most of these schools accept GI Bill benefits, covering tuition costs entirely.
The Testing Process (Same for Everyone)
Regardless of your path, you must pass:
- Three written tests: General, Airframe, Powerplant
- Oral and practical exams with a DME
Military experience doesn't exempt you from testing — it exempts you from attending a Part 147 school. You still need to demonstrate competency through the FAA exams.
Study Resources for Military Transitioners
| Resource | Notes |
|---|---|
| ASA AMT Prepware | Best written test prep software |
| FAA AMT Handbooks | Free from FAA; official study material |
| COOL Program study guides | Branch-specific guides aligned with FAA tests |
| Transition assistance programs | Many bases offer A&P prep classes |
GI Bill and Financial Benefits
| Benefit | Application |
|---|---|
| Post-9/11 GI Bill | Covers Part 147 school tuition (100% at eligible schools) |
| Montgomery GI Bill | May cover training costs |
| VR&E (Vocational Rehab) | For veterans with service-connected disabilities |
| State veterans programs | Additional tuition assistance in many states |
| Defense Department SkillBridge | Industry internships during last 6 months of service |
SkillBridge is particularly valuable: This program allows active-duty members to intern at civilian aviation companies during their final 6 months of service. Several airlines, MROs, and Part 147 schools participate.
Civilian Employer Expectations
Military mechanics are highly sought after, but employers need you to:
- Hold the FAA A&P certificate (military training alone isn't sufficient for civilian work)
- Adapt to civilian workplace culture and procedures
- Learn specific civilian aircraft types (your F-16 experience is impressive, but the airline flies 737s)
- Get comfortable with civilian maintenance manuals and documentation standards
Transition Timeline
| Phase | Duration |
|---|---|
| Document military experience for FAA | 1–3 months |
| Study for written tests | 4–8 weeks |
| Take and pass written tests | 2–3 weeks |
| Schedule and complete oral/practical | 2–4 weeks |
| Job search and hiring | 1–3 months |
| Total | 4–8 months |
If you start the documentation and study process 6 months before separation, you can walk out of the military with your A&P certificate in hand and a civilian job lined up.
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