IATA Calls for Raising Pilot Age Limit to 67
#911
On Reserve
Joined: Jul 2024
Posts: 24
Likes: 12
There was a HNL rope-start “herpes” pilot who flew till he was 80. Kept passing his medicals and check rides. Go figure…
there are plenty of under age 65 pilots who couldn’t pass more stringent medical/cognitive tests now. Be careful what you wish for.
Age 60 was a greed-driven deal by the then CEO of AA and the then Administrator of the CAA because he wanted his senior Union supporting pilots forced out.
The age limit has always been a political thing.
there are plenty of under age 65 pilots who couldn’t pass more stringent medical/cognitive tests now. Be careful what you wish for.
Age 60 was a greed-driven deal by the then CEO of AA and the then Administrator of the CAA because he wanted his senior Union supporting pilots forced out.
The age limit has always been a political thing.
#912
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,107
Likes: 793
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
It could be interpreted to be "raise the age now" and study it as we go to make sure it stays safe.
I suspect it was deliberately crafted to be vague, looks like the emphasis is on supporting member states who may be reluctant to make their own decision. But if certain entities are pushing this, it doesn't matter what other member states do, as long as THEY can raise their own age (or already have), and the ICAO age goes up, they can still get whatever benefit they're looking for. They don't really care whether Lichtenstein and Namibia raise their age or not.
I speak fluent bureaucrat, from years in mil HHQs. At that level nothing is accidental. Kind of like Retroactivity vs. Non-Retroactivity.
Also this is interesting:
2.2.6
The two leading concerns for future risk of medical-cause fatal accidents are mental health conditions and problematic substance use (e.g., alcohol and other drugs). These potential causes of aviation related fatalities tend to present in a younger demographic.
#913
Line Holder
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 972
Likes: 1
Careful. Objectively that's not exactly what the WP says.
It could be interpreted to be "raise the age now" and study it as we go to make sure it stays safe.
I suspect it was deliberately crafted to be vague, looks like the emphasis is on supporting member states who may be reluctant to make their own decision. But if certain entities are pushing this, it doesn't matter what other member states do, as long as THEY can raise their own age (or already have), and the ICAO age goes up, they can still get whatever benefit they're looking for. They don't really care whether Lichtenstein and Namibia raise their age or not.
I speak fluent bureaucrat, from years in mil HHQs. At that level nothing is accidental. Kind of like Retroactivity vs. Non-Retroactivity.
Also this is interesting:
2.2.6
The two leading concerns for future risk of medical-cause fatal accidents are mental health conditions and problematic substance use (e.g., alcohol and other drugs). These potential causes of aviation related fatalities tend to present in a younger demographic.
It could be interpreted to be "raise the age now" and study it as we go to make sure it stays safe.
I suspect it was deliberately crafted to be vague, looks like the emphasis is on supporting member states who may be reluctant to make their own decision. But if certain entities are pushing this, it doesn't matter what other member states do, as long as THEY can raise their own age (or already have), and the ICAO age goes up, they can still get whatever benefit they're looking for. They don't really care whether Lichtenstein and Namibia raise their age or not.
I speak fluent bureaucrat, from years in mil HHQs. At that level nothing is accidental. Kind of like Retroactivity vs. Non-Retroactivity.
Also this is interesting:
2.2.6
The two leading concerns for future risk of medical-cause fatal accidents are mental health conditions and problematic substance use (e.g., alcohol and other drugs). These potential causes of aviation related fatalities tend to present in a younger demographic.
In 2006 ICAO implemented Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs) to raise the age limit from 60 to 65 for pilots undertaking multi-pilot international commercial air transport (CAT) operations. Building on the work already done by ICAO through the Medical Provisions Study Group over the past 19 years in considering further extensions of age limits, this paper proposes that ICAO now raise the age to 67 years. This change should follow a similar approach to that which was successfully applied in 2006, and be implemented within a framework of additional safety assurance measures.
Action:The Assembly is invited to:
a) support the extension of the upper age limit for pilots engaged in multi-pilot international commercial air transport (CAT) to 67 years, provided another pilot is under age 65;
b) request that ICAO establish standardized medical risk assessment and oversight systems informed by a standard set of pilot medical data to reliably assess the medical risks associated with pilot age; and
c) request that States collaborate with industry and representative bodies across medical, licensing, and operational domains on developing guidance materials to support implementation of the increased age for pilots in international commercial air transport (CAT) operations.
ACTION A: Calls on ICAO to raise the upper age limit for international multi-pilot CAT operations from 65 to 67 now.
ACTIONS B and C: Function as future-proofing, by creating standardized medical oversight systems and implementation guidance, they lay the groundwork for potentially reconsidering or even removing the upper limit later.
This framing aligns with ICAO’s handling of IATA’s request for survey data: among the 193 member states, some are deemed “capable” of managing pilots above a restrictive age limit (67) through strong oversight systems, while many others are not.
Actions B and C move toward the long-term goal of enabling those incapable states to safely expand beyond a restrictive limit.
Last edited by BlueJetDork; 09-23-2025 at 08:34 AM.
#914
ACTION A: Calls on ICAO to raise the upper age limit for international multi-pilot CAT operations from 65 to 67 now.
ACTIONS B and C: Function as future-proofing, by creating standardized medical oversight systems and implementation guidance, they lay the groundwork for potentially reconsidering or even removing the upper limit later.
This framing aligns with ICAO’s handling of IATA’s request for survey data: among the 193 member states, some are deemed “capable” of managing pilots above a restrictive age limit (67) through strong oversight systems, while many others are not.
Actions B and C move toward the long-term goal of enabling those incapable states to safely expand beyond a restrictive limit.
#915
On Reserve
Joined: Feb 2023
Posts: 176
Likes: 58
Also this is interesting:
2.2.6
The two leading concerns for future risk of medical-cause fatal accidents are mental health conditions and problematic substance use (e.g., alcohol and other drugs). These potential causes of aviation related fatalities tend to present in a younger demographic.
2.2.6
The two leading concerns for future risk of medical-cause fatal accidents are mental health conditions and problematic substance use (e.g., alcohol and other drugs). These potential causes of aviation related fatalities tend to present in a younger demographic.
#916
Line Holder
Joined: Feb 2018
Posts: 615
Likes: 148
In 2006 ICAO implemented Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs) to raise the age limit from 60 to 65 for pilots undertaking multi-pilot international commercial air transport (CAT) operations. Building on the work already done by ICAO through the Medical Provisions Study Group over the past 19 years in considering further extensions of age limits, this paper proposes that ICAO now raise the age to 67 years. This change should follow a similar approach to that which was successfully applied in 2006, and be implemented within a framework of additional safety assurance measures.
ACTION A: Calls on ICAO to raise the upper age limit for international multi-pilot CAT operations from 65 to 67 now.
In 2003, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) began discussions to increase the pilot retirement age to 65. After three years of debate and consultation, ICAO formally amended its standards in November 2006.
In 2007, Congress passed the
Fair Treatment for Experienced Pilots Act, which raised the mandatory retirement age for commercial pilots from 60 to 65. The bill was signed into law on December 13, 2007.
The stand alone LEPF bill has very small chance. The 118th congress is one of the most contentious in history.
Even if ICAO instantly raised the age this week, as opposed to taking 3 years like last time, then a bill would have to be passed in congress.
ICAO would make a pathway for that bill, but it would still likely get hung up.
This has to pass through a UN agency that moves at the speed of smell followed by a strongly divided congress going to extreme measures to disrupt each other.
I think anyone trying to raise funds by saying the age will be raised in the United States anytime soon is kind of disingenuous to those with months left.
#917
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,107
Likes: 793
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Maybe the idea is the younger pilot is there in case the old guys strokes out, and the old guy can supervise if the kid's micro-dosing experiment goes awry.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



