Skip to content
    Back to the blog
    Students25 Apr 20267 min read

    How to choose an ATPL ground school in 2026: a buyer's guide

    Modular vs integrated, classroom vs distance learning, cost ranges, pass rates, and the four questions that actually separate a good ATPL school from a bad one.

    Maxime Taieb
    Co-founder, Veejo

    Picking an ATPL ground school is the single most expensive decision most cadets make before stepping into a sim. Get it right and you walk out with 14 EASA exams passed and a clear shot at airline selection. Get it wrong and you'll spend an extra 6-12 months and €5-10k catching up. Here's how to choose.

    Modular or integrated: pick the model first

    The format you train under sets the cost, timeline, and which airlines will look at you.

    IntegratedModular
    Duration18-24 months24-36 months
    Cost (2026, EU)€80k-€130k€55k-€90k
    FormatContinuous, full-timeSelf-paced phases
    RecruitmentStrongest with cadet-pipeline carriersSame access on the open market
    Best fitCareer changers with savings, ab-initioWorking students, hour-builders

    The cadet-pipeline argument is overstated. Outside a few branded MPL programmes, your EASA frozen ATPL is the same document whether you got it integrated or modular.

    EASA ATO vs non-EASA "exam prep" providers

    Only an EASA-approved ATO (Approved Training Organisation) can sign you off for the 14 written exams. Some non-ATO providers sell question-bank prep but cannot present you to the CAA. Always verify the ATO approval number on your national CAA's public register before paying a deposit.

    Classroom vs distance learning

    Distance learning ATOs grew from ~30% of the European market pre-2020 to over 60% by 2025. The trade-off:

    • Classroom (residential): 4-6 months on-site, instructor-led, full peer cohort. Best for fast completion and exam discipline.
    • Distance (with brush-up): 12-18 months self-study, short residential blocks for revision and exam sittings. Best if you're working or constrained by location.

    Distance learning pass rates have largely caught up with residential ATOs — the gap that was once double digits has narrowed to a few points at well-run providers. What separates outcomes today is study discipline and tutor access, not the delivery format.

    What to actually ask a prospective school

    The brochure won't answer these. Email them directly and require written answers.

    1. First-attempt pass rate per subject, last 12 months. Not "overall pass rate" — that includes 3rd and 4th sittings. Schools that won't share per-subject data are hiding something.
    2. Question-bank licence included? Aviationexam, BGS, ATPL Questions. A serious ATO bundles at least one. If they don't, add €120-€220 to your budget.
    3. Exam booking and re-sit policy. Who books the sittings? Are re-sits charged extra? In some cases yes, in some bundled — clarify before signing.
    4. CAA sitting location flexibility. Can you sit exams at your nearest CAA centre? Or are you locked into the school's nominated centre, with travel costs?

    If the answers to these four are clear and specific, the school is probably solid. Vague answers = vague training.

    Subject difficulty in 2026, ranked

    Useful for budgeting study time, not for picking a school (every ATPL student sits all 14):

    1. Principles of Flight — heaviest theory load
    2. General Navigation — the all-nighter subject
    3. Performance — formula-heavy
    4. Air Law — memorisation, but expansive
    5. Operational Procedures — pure regulation reading
    6. Meteorology — weather + interpretation
    7. Mass and Balance
    8. Flight Planning
    9. Instrumentation
    10. Aircraft General Knowledge
    11. Radio Navigation
    12. VFR and IFR Comms
    13. Human Performance
    14. Principles of Flight — Helicopters (only if applicable)

    Most candidates clear 9-10 in the first sitting block, then knock out the remaining 4-5 in a second block. Plan for two sitting trips, not one heroic week.

    Hidden costs nobody puts in the brochure

    ItemTypical (EUR)
    Question-bank annual licence120-220
    CAA exam fees (14 exams)800-1,400
    Re-sit fees if you fail (per exam)90-180
    Travel + accommodation for residentials600-2,500
    Class 1 medical, initial350-650
    English Language Proficiency assessment180-450
    Add to brochure price:2,000-4,500

    The brochure is the floor, not the ceiling.

    Red flags

    • Heavy upfront payment with no instalment option.
    • "Guaranteed airline placement" claims — no European ATO can guarantee this.
    • Reluctance to share examiner pass rates.
    • No live instructor contact during distance learning (it should be at least 4 hours/week of office hours or webinars).
    • Pressure to commit on a site-visit day.

    How Veejo helps

    • The Veejo Exam Tracker monitors your 14 subjects, sittings, and expiry of the 18-month ATPL theory completion window.
    • Veejo Tutors include current airline pilots who passed the 14 exams in the last 2-5 years. The cheapest way to unblock a subject you're stuck on is one 30-minute tutor session, not a re-sit.
    • Morris AI answers your subject questions 24/7 — Premium students get unlimited queries, with pilot-reviewed answers on Premium+.

    Browse ATPL tutors in the Veejo Network →