How to Prepare
How you study matters as much as what you study. The FAA's own Aviation Instructor's Handbook (FAA-H-8083-9) says learning sticks when you retrieve it, space it, and apply it — not when you reread it. Here's that doctrine turned into a checkride plan.
1. Study to the ACS, not around it
The Airman Certification Standards are the literal blueprint of your exam — the examiner is required to evaluate every task. Work through each task's knowledge, risk management, and skill elements and honestly grade yourself: could you answer a question on this element right now? The task pages in this guide mirror the ACS structure exactly, so a gap in the guide is a gap on checkride day.
2. Test yourself instead of rereading
Rereading feels productive because the material looks familiar — but familiarity isn't recall. Pulling an answer out of your own head (retrieval practice, the "testing effect") is what builds the durable memory the oral demands. Use quiz mode on the task pages: read the question, say the answer out loud, then reveal. If you couldn't produce it without peeking, it isn't learned yet.
3. Space it out — don't cram
Ten short sessions beat one long one. Distributed practice is standard FAA learning doctrine, and it's what Study Sessions automate for you: spaced-repetition scheduling resurfaces each card right before you'd forget it. A practical rhythm — clear your "due for review" queue daily, hit "weakest cards" a few times a week, and work "not yet reviewed" material until every task has been seen at least once.
4. Make it aircraft-specific
- Memorize your V-speed table — and be ready to explain where each number comes from in your AFM. Drill it on the Quick Reference page.
- Pull out your actual POH/AFM and current W&B sheet. Empty weight and useful load vary with installed equipment; representative numbers are not authoritative for your tail number.
- Run a full weight & balance and performance calculation for the flight the examiner assigns — with your numbers, not the book example's.
5. Chair-fly the flight — and the oral
Sit in a quiet room and fly the checkride in your head: flows, callouts, maneuver entries, emergency procedures, spoken out loud with your hands moving. It's free practice that transfers directly to the airplane. Do the same for the oral — explain answers as if teaching them to a student, and get a mock oral from your CFI or a study partner. If you can teach it, you know it; if you stumble, you found a gap while it's still cheap to fix.
6. Use current references
Examiners probe whether your sources are current. Study from the Aviation Weather Handbook (FAA-H-8083-28), the current FAR/AIM, the Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge, and the Airplane Flying Handbook — and know the modernization story: the GFA replaced the textual Area Forecast, and the FA, Weather Depiction Chart, DUATS, and Flight Watch are discontinued. Details live on the Weather Information task page.
The night before: skim the Quick Reference drill blocks, clear your due cards in Study Sessions, and stop early. Rest is part of the plan — IMSAFE applies to checkride day too.