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Helicopter Air Ambulance Ramblings

RobLyman

- hawk Pilot
pilot
None
Truth in advertising...I'm an Army IFE. But I'm not offended. However, having come from the Navy with more instrument time than anyone in our unit, AND being a CFII and MEI on the civilian side, I was not treated as being even equal to the IFEs in my unit. There was a lot of envy because I could take off in 0/0 according to Army rules and some IFEs could not. Because I'm primarily maintenance during the week and the company SP on weekends, I like to think I haven't been totally assimilated.

I have beat my head against the wall for 10 years and can't understand the terror look in my fellow IFEs' eyes when I bring up TACAN point to point. Trust me, the Navy has it's own bias as well, something I get reminded of quite often.
 

Purdue

Chicks Dig Rotors...
pilot
I saw one person post it above... but what are some realistic pay numbers for those of you who are flying Helos in the market now? Medevac/GOPLATS?

I made the transition to Regional Airlines back in 2017 mainly because there was so little gouge on the civilian helo market (thanks for this post!), and because they all seemed to need a thousand more hours than a 10-year Navy guy was getting out with at the time.

Regionals are paying around $50k a year now, with the possibility for growth and a future... I remember talking to guys that made the transition to the regionals in my new hire class who spoke about being 6+ years at an Oil Platform gig and still making $35k-$40k, or MEDEVAC guys not wanting to live so far from main cities?

I miss rotors a lot some days, but the work is so easy in airlines... and risk free... from reading the above I get that there are a lot of 12-14 hour days in helo land?

I routinely get 17ish days off a month at the regionals, and life is pretty grand... plus free travel. I'm curious if the helicopter industry might feel the pain from us shifting to regionals and if they've maybe increased pay/QOL? Or correct any of my above interpretations! I'm wondering on a current comparison between the two options for Helo bubbas about to make the transition and hope they can see the info that I had wished was more readily available when I got out of Uncle Sam's Flying Circus.
 

Purdue

Chicks Dig Rotors...
pilot
You get 17 days a month off? What the??!?!
It pays to be a line-holder... but yeah? 14 days off is the worst I've seen for lineholders. I easily average above that. Let's see... for me:
  • April: 19 days off (though 3 of those were for a dropped trip I didn't get paid for)
  • May: 17 days off
  • June: 15 days off
 

ChuckMK23

FERS and TSP contributor!
pilot
Non mil trained Helo Commercial/Instrument rated pilots are entering into the HAA, Offshore, and utility workforce. We have a local helo flight school with a R-22 and R-44 - students are paying to build time (flying local tour flights). And from there they are competing for light single engine tour/charter jobs as an turbine experience step and then moving to HAA or GOM. Its crazy. Typical profile seems to be prior service enlisted or high school graduate working blue collar or service type of work and they consider $50K of HAA entry level the "big time". Lots of dudes wearing Carhartt and beards who think college is a waste of time. I'm amazed.
 

Gatordev

Well-Known Member
pilot
Site Admin
Contributor
...and they consider $50K of HAA entry level the "big time".

That's not a normal number for the larger HAA companies. I can't speak for single-engine GOPLAT salaries, but FO twin/IFR salaries are $80-90K if you can get a job (which is hard right now).

Regionals are paying around $50k a year now, with the possibility for growth and a future...

I don't have the inside knowledge on "all" the salaries, but for HAA, starting somewhere at $70K would be realistic for the bigger companies. Some have been lower than others, but there's also reasons why those that are higher are higher. The steps for each pay level aren't great, but keep slightly ahead of inflation. Add to that IFR pay and then any additional stipend for working at a base that has additional housing pay, and it will go up more.

I've seen housing pay as much as $10K/year, but those are in crappy places. But one man's crappy place may be near another man's home, so it's all relative. Also, IFR programs can sometimes thin the herd. Those guys that Chuck mentions may have their IFR ticket, but they have almost no actual time, and that can be an issue for SPIFR ops. There's been more than one military guy who hasn't made it through a SPIFR syllabus or checkride.
 
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