If you want to fly, you must be allowed to fly — and that starts with health. The aviation medical certificate is mandatory for every licensed pilot. There are different classes, different requirements, and a clear process — which for many aspiring pilots remains a black box.
Three Classes, Three Requirements
EASA Medical Classes Overview
| Class | For | Validity | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class 1 | CPL, ATPL, IR (commercial) | 12 months (under 40); 6 months (over 40, airline) | EUR 300–600 |
| Class 2 | PPL, LAPL (with restrictions), Night Rating | 60 months under 40; 24 months 40–50; 12 months over 50 | EUR 150–300 |
| LAPL Medical | LAPL (Light Aircraft Pilot Licence) | 60 months under 40; 24 months over 40 | EUR 80–150 |
What Is Examined in a Class 1 Medical?
The Class 1 examination is the most comprehensive and is conducted exclusively by EASA-approved Aeromedical Centers (AeMC) — in Germany, for example, at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in Hamburg or the Institute of Aerospace Medicine in Cologne.
Common Exclusion and Restriction Reasons
Not every medical finding automatically leads to unfitness. EASA distinguishes between absolute exclusion criteria (very rare) and assessable findings:
What Happens If Declared Unfit?
An unfitness decision is not a final verdict. EASA has a structured appeals process:
Alternatively: those who are unfit under an EASA license may under certain circumstances obtain an FAA Third-Class Medical — since FAA and EASA have different standards. This then permits flying N-registered aircraft in the US at minimum (BasicMed since 2017 is particularly relevant here).
The aviation medical is not an obstacle — it's a safety system protecting everyone. The vast majority of aspiring pilots pass without any issues. Those with pre-existing conditions should obtain an informal preliminary assessment from an AME before investing in training — it costs little and provides clarity.
For Airvalon customers who are planning their entry into aviation: we recommend getting the medical sorted first — before choosing a flight school or purchasing an aircraft. It's the prerequisite for everything else.