Current North Sea Pilots Salaries
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Home Sweet Home
Age: 52
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Current North Sea Pilots Salaries
Hi there folks,
I am currently a ppl (H) looking to progress through to ATPL (H) with (IR)
I have my class 1 medical and am currently in the process of accumulating the finances required to make this happen. I am however a tad concerned about what my salary will be once I am in the fold as a first officer. I ask this because I, like many others, will more than likely have to borrow some of the funding to complete my goal.
Before I embark any further financially, I would really appreciate any guidance that anyone can offer with regards to the level of salary I can expect to be offered from my initial first officer posting through to Captain.
Thanks for any advice.
I am currently a ppl (H) looking to progress through to ATPL (H) with (IR)
I have my class 1 medical and am currently in the process of accumulating the finances required to make this happen. I am however a tad concerned about what my salary will be once I am in the fold as a first officer. I ask this because I, like many others, will more than likely have to borrow some of the funding to complete my goal.
Before I embark any further financially, I would really appreciate any guidance that anyone can offer with regards to the level of salary I can expect to be offered from my initial first officer posting through to Captain.
Thanks for any advice.
Go spend about £110k to get all the qualifications you need, then sit around waiting to get a job in the North Sea as there are plenty of other folk waiting for jobs, being made redundant and generally not feeling that North Sea flying is the be all and end all they once imagined. Be careful what you wish for.
expect to start on 35k at the very bottom, and after 20 years you might be on 6 figures.
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: The North
Posts: 19
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Wobble,
I would go for it; building hours, CPL module, IR will probably take you another year to complete (hope your looking to book your IR course now). Although the market for new co-pilots isn't that great at the moment, things can change quickly. Particularly as most job losses are due to companies "tightening belts" rather than demand offshore.
Its handy to have another job you can keep ticking over till you get your first offshore job (and one you can fall back on when made redundant!)
I started on about £45K as a 200hr total time CPL IR and as said before it can go up to 6 figures.
Good luck!
I would go for it; building hours, CPL module, IR will probably take you another year to complete (hope your looking to book your IR course now). Although the market for new co-pilots isn't that great at the moment, things can change quickly. Particularly as most job losses are due to companies "tightening belts" rather than demand offshore.
Its handy to have another job you can keep ticking over till you get your first offshore job (and one you can fall back on when made redundant!)
I started on about £45K as a 200hr total time CPL IR and as said before it can go up to 6 figures.
Good luck!
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Home Sweet Home
Age: 52
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Commercial & IR
Hey SFHawk,
Cheers for the post. Thats cheered me up a little bit. I was ready for throwing the towel in earlier today but I think its still worth plodding on for now.
Im sure im not the first and certainly wont be the last aspiring commercial pilot to have second thoughts about progressing any further.
I know that there are already a lot of qualified guys out there who are still waiting to get a foot on the ladder and are quite understandably becoming dissillousioned with it all.
But hopefully things will pick up by the time I get through it all.
Thanks.
Cheers for the post. Thats cheered me up a little bit. I was ready for throwing the towel in earlier today but I think its still worth plodding on for now.
Im sure im not the first and certainly wont be the last aspiring commercial pilot to have second thoughts about progressing any further.
I know that there are already a lot of qualified guys out there who are still waiting to get a foot on the ladder and are quite understandably becoming dissillousioned with it all.
But hopefully things will pick up by the time I get through it all.
Thanks.
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: 18 Degrees North
Posts: 699
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I reckon I spent £40k net on pilot training up to the year 2000, and was lucky enough to get my IR sponsored, but if I had to spend more than £100k now with no immediate prospect of a job, i would say that it is not worth the risk.
Luckily it all worked out for me but if I could do it all again I would go fixed wing, there are just so many more jobs around
CF
Luckily it all worked out for me but if I could do it all again I would go fixed wing, there are just so many more jobs around
CF
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: UK
Posts: 281
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I had a similar experience to Camp Freddie, 40-50k outlay for CPL/FI, sponsored IR (although im not working offshore) but I agree totally with what he says regarding job prospects/risk etc... If I had to do it all again I would go FW instead although I prefer rotary.
Good luck,
BC
Good luck,
BC
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Land of damp and drizzle
Posts: 608
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
It's possible to do zero to CPL/IR for around £70k - £80k, but it takes some careful planning and research. You're unlikely to get any financial help unless you're young (under 25, typically) and even then, there's not a lot around.
There is no waiting list for IRs currently - you can get on a JAA ME course within a month or 2, if you have the cash and hours ready to go.
There don't seem to be any co-jo offshore jobs around at the moment, although that may change in the next 12 - 18 months. There appear to be even fewer low-hour jobs around generally than usual. If you do go ahead with pilot training, I strongly suggest having some other career or source of income to live off until you get your first pilot job; this goes double if you're planning to fund any part of your training with a loan.
There is no waiting list for IRs currently - you can get on a JAA ME course within a month or 2, if you have the cash and hours ready to go.
There don't seem to be any co-jo offshore jobs around at the moment, although that may change in the next 12 - 18 months. There appear to be even fewer low-hour jobs around generally than usual. If you do go ahead with pilot training, I strongly suggest having some other career or source of income to live off until you get your first pilot job; this goes double if you're planning to fund any part of your training with a loan.
That said, now could just be the genius time to start training.
Lack of training demand and oversupply of trainers and idle helicopters could lead to some good deals. Nobody training now could lead to a shortage of graduates in a few years time when training and cheap hour building is wrapping up.
Buy in a down market, sell in an up market.
Lack of training demand and oversupply of trainers and idle helicopters could lead to some good deals. Nobody training now could lead to a shortage of graduates in a few years time when training and cheap hour building is wrapping up.
Buy in a down market, sell in an up market.
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Turkey
Age: 43
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
What is my chance to find a job
Hello there ;
ı am an ex army pilot. Recently retired from Turkısh army. I have 1900 flight hours. SAR pilot. Deck and ship landing qualified. Spend last four years on SAR battalion. HUET.
Bell 206 , UH-1 (AB-205) , AS-532/332 UL SAR rated. Have a JAA Cpl / Ir (H) .
What is my chance to get a good job in northern sea.
Murat KAYIN. Heli pilot
ı am an ex army pilot. Recently retired from Turkısh army. I have 1900 flight hours. SAR pilot. Deck and ship landing qualified. Spend last four years on SAR battalion. HUET.
Bell 206 , UH-1 (AB-205) , AS-532/332 UL SAR rated. Have a JAA Cpl / Ir (H) .
What is my chance to get a good job in northern sea.
Murat KAYIN. Heli pilot
Thankfully, no! (Or at least not yet. Please don't suggest it to the management).
But expect to be bonded for the value of the type rating. Anywhere from £30-50k.
Murat Kayin: absolutely NIL chance. Unless you can think of a way of bypassing nationals queueing up in front of you????
Wobble wings: Please please heed these warnings. Don't know your age background financial status etc, but would VERY STRONGLY suggest if you need to fly, you:
Learn to fly FW.
Fly FW commercially.
Fly rotary as a hobby.
Wobble wings: Please please heed these warnings. Don't know your age background financial status etc, but would VERY STRONGLY suggest if you need to fly, you:
Learn to fly FW.
Fly FW commercially.
Fly rotary as a hobby.
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Turkey
Age: 43
Posts: 3
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
um... lifting :
that is a great news. but ı havent heard anything about that. ı will call my friend in red star. and googled CHC site but couldnt find anything.
I am the man of that job ))
that is a great news. but ı havent heard anything about that. ı will call my friend in red star. and googled CHC site but couldnt find anything.
I am the man of that job ))
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: in my house
Posts: 118
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
the job in Turkey is being run by CHC global, however, that will be changing. at least one of the aircraft is a 332 based in Aberdeen till recently if they havent changed their minds for the 100th time!!