Airline Transport Pilot Licence (ATPL) lessons
Personalized 1-on-1 lessons for ATPL, CPL and Instrument Rating (IR)
AirLessons connects student pilots and professionals with experienced instructors for focused, one-on-one aviation training. Whether you are preparing for ATPL theory exams, advancing your Commercial Pilot License, or mastering IFR procedures for your Instrument Rating, our sessions give you the time, structure and individual attention you need to succeed.
- CPL-focused training with real-world commercial and airline operational insight
- IFR procedures, approaches, holds and situational awareness
- Learn with airline pilots, TRI/TRE and certified aviation instructors
How it works
Three steps to start and make progress fast.
Choose what you need now: Air Law, MET, Nav, Human Performance, and more.
Compare profiles and pick the instructor that matches your level and goals.
Do focused 1-to-1 sessions, fix weak points, and prepare with mock questions.
Subjects covered for ATPL
Browse all Airline Transport Pilot Licence (ATPL) theory subjects and select a topic to view instructors currently offering ATPL lessons in that area.
Our instructors
ATPL lessons FAQ
Common questions
Yes. Online 1-to-1 ATPL lessons are effective for complex subjects like Performance, Flight Planning, and General Navigation, especially when you need structured explanations and exam-focused practice.
Students often find General Navigation, Performance, Mass & Balance, and Instrumentation among the hardest. These subjects require strong calculation skills and a clear understanding of procedures.
The instructor reviews the theory behind the formulas, works through step-by-step examples, and helps you build a repeatable method to solve exam-style problems confidently.
Yes. Lessons can focus on reviewing question banks, analyzing mistakes, and understanding the logic behind correct answers to improve exam performance.
Bring your current progress report, question bank statistics if available, and a list of topics where you consistently lose points.
Usually yes. Mastering one demanding subject before moving to the next helps reduce overload and improves long-term retention, especially during intensive ATPL preparation.