FAA IACRA: Complete Integrated Airman Certification & Rating Application Guide
FAA IACRA at iacra.faa.gov: get your FTN, file pilot certificate applications, work with your CFI and DPE, track status. Common errors and fixes.

Every U.S. pilot certificate issued since 2010 has flowed through the same online portal: IACRA, the Integrated Airman Certification and Rating Application system. It lives at iacra.faa.gov, it's free to use, and it has quietly replaced what used to be a stack of pink-and-white paper forms shuffled between flight schools, examiners, and the FAA's Civil Aviation Registry in Oklahoma City. If you're chasing a checkride — student, private, instrument, commercial, multi-engine, ATP, CFI, ground instructor, mechanic, or dispatcher — IACRA is where your paperwork starts and where the FAA's record of you officially begins.
The system isn't pretty. The interface looks like it was designed in 2008 and left alone, the session timeouts are short, and a single typo in a date field can lock you out of the application until your CFI logs in and resets it. None of that matters once you understand the workflow. IACRA is reliable, the data syncs cleanly with the Airman Registry, and most checkrides move through it in 30 minutes flat once everyone's account is properly linked.
This guide walks through the entire faa iacra process — registering an account, generating your FAA Tracking Number (FTN), completing each major application type, getting your instructor's recommendation, scheduling the practical exam with a Designated Pilot Examiner or Aviation Safety Inspector, and tracking status afterward. We'll also cover the common errors that get applications kicked back, what to do when you forget your password or FTN, and the rare cases where the paper Form 8710 still applies. By the end you'll know exactly what to do when your instructor recommends you for a checkride.
FAA IACRA System at a Glance
Before anything else, you need an IACRA account and an FAA Tracking Number. The FTN is a unique 7-digit identifier that follows you for life — it links every certificate, rating, medical, and application you'll ever submit. Lose your FTN and you're not locked out forever, but you can't proceed with an application until you recover it. Write it down. Photograph it. Email it to yourself. Most CFIs keep a spreadsheet of student FTNs because they get asked for them three times a day.
Registration starts with the orange Register button on iacra.faa.gov. You'll pick a role first — Applicant for most pilots, Recommending Instructor if you're a CFI, Certifying Officer if you're a DPE or ASI. You can hold multiple roles, and most CFIs do — they're both an Applicant (when applying for their own ratings) and a Recommending Instructor (when signing off students). The system lets you add roles later, so pick whichever you need first and add the others as you go.
Account creation requires your full legal name exactly as it appears on your driver's license, a current email address, three security questions, and a password that meets the FAA's requirements — 12 characters minimum, mixed case, digits, and a special character. After submission, the system generates your FTN and emails it to you. The email sometimes goes to spam, so check there if you don't see it within 5 minutes.

Legal name — must match your driver's license exactly. Update your driver's license first if recently married, divorced, or changed.
Email address — use a personal account you'll keep for years, not a school or work email that might expire.
Three security questions — write the answers down. If you forget them, the FAA help desk verifies identity over the phone before resetting.
Password — 12 characters minimum, mixed case, digits, and a special character. The system rejects common patterns.
FTN — emailed after registration, then visible in the upper-right corner of every IACRA page. Save it somewhere permanent.
IACRA handles a long list of application types, and each one routes through the same general workflow with slightly different fields. The most common applications are Student Pilot, Private Pilot, Instrument Rating, Commercial Pilot, Multi-engine Class Rating, ATP, Flight Instructor, Ground Instructor, Mechanic (Airframe and/or Powerplant), and Aircraft Dispatcher. Each application starts the same way: log in, click Start New Application, pick the certificate type, fill the form, get your CFI's electronic recommendation, then meet your examiner.
The Student Pilot application changed in 2016. You no longer get a paper student certificate during your medical exam — instead, the student pilot certificate is issued through IACRA after your CFI submits the application. Processing takes 4–6 weeks, and the plastic card arrives by mail. You can legally fly solo (with proper endorsements) even before the card arrives, as long as the application has been submitted and the FTN exists.
For each step up — Private, Instrument, Commercial — you'll create a new application within IACRA, not a new account. Your FTN carries you through your entire pilot career. The same goes for instructor ratings, ATP, and any added class or type ratings. Mechanics use the same system but route through a different application type, and the workflow involves the local FSDO (Flight Standards District Office) more directly than pilot applications do.
IACRA Application Types You'll Use
First IACRA application most pilots file. Replaces the old paper student certificate issued at the AME's office. Processing takes 4-6 weeks, plastic card arrives by mail. Required before first solo.
Standard application after passing the FAA Knowledge Test. Includes endorsement records, aeronautical experience hours, and the checkride application. Most candidates submit it 1-2 weeks before the practical test.
Adds instrument privileges to a private or commercial certificate. IACRA pulls your existing certificate data, you add the new rating's training and experience, then the DPE signs off after the IPC checkride.
Allows compensation for flying. Application includes commercial maneuvers training records, complex/high-performance endorsements, and the 250 total hours of aeronautical experience required by Part 61.
Class rating added to an existing pilot certificate. Workflow is short — IACRA validates training records, the DPE signs off after the practical, and the new rating shows on the next plastic card.
The top pilot certificate. ATP applications usually go to an Aviation Safety Inspector (ASI) rather than a DPE, and require the ATP-CTP course, 1,500 hours, and the ATP written test before IACRA submission.
Airframe and Powerplant mechanic certifications. Workflow involves the local FSDO more directly than pilot applications because the mechanic module covers fewer paths. Form 8610-2 is still common for some cases.
Required for Part 121 (airline) dispatch operations. IACRA handles the certificate application, but the practical exam scheduling routes through the FSDO. Dispatchers receive a plastic certificate similar to pilots.
Once you complete your portion of the application, the recommending instructor takes over. Your CFI logs into IACRA with their own credentials, pulls up your application by FTN or name, reviews the entire form, then signs the recommendation electronically. This step replaces the old paper 8710-1 signature block — the CFI's IACRA login and electronic signature serve as the legal recommendation. After signing, the application status changes to Pending Examiner Review, and the workflow moves to the next role.
The Designated Pilot Examiner (DPE) is a private-sector pilot the FAA has authorized to conduct checkrides on the agency's behalf. DPEs are the ones most general aviation candidates meet — they administer about 90% of pilot practical tests in the country. Each DPE has a defined geographic area and a defined list of certificates and ratings they're authorized to issue. Your CFI helps you find the right one, but you contact and schedule the DPE directly, usually 2–6 weeks before you'll be ready.
Aviation Safety Inspectors (ASIs) work directly for the FAA at FSDOs around the country. They conduct checkrides for ATP, CFI initial, and a few other high-stakes certificates that DPEs can't always touch. ASI checkrides are free (no examiner fee), but slots are limited because each FSDO only has a handful of inspectors with active checkride authority. You'll work through your FSDO's scheduling office directly to set an appointment.

Inside the IACRA Workflow: Role by Role
The Applicant role is the one most users hold. You create the account, get your FTN, then start a new application for each certificate or rating you pursue. Inside each application you fill personal info, aeronautical experience hours, training records, endorsements, and the medical certificate reference. After submission, the application moves to your CFI for recommendation. You can edit anything in Open status, but once submitted, only the CFI or DPE can make changes — you'd have to request edits from them. Keep your profile up to date as you change addresses, get new medicals, or update your driver's license.
Status tracking inside IACRA is where most candidates get nervous in the days after their checkride. Your application status moves through several stages: Open (you're still editing), Submitted (sent to the instructor), Recommended (CFI signed), Pending Examiner (waiting for the DPE), Approved (DPE submitted the result), and finally Processed (Civil Aviation Registry issued the permanent certificate). Most checkrides reach Processed within 7–14 business days.
The temporary certificate the DPE hands you on checkride day is valid for 120 days — that's your authorization to fly with the new rating until the plastic card arrives. If the plastic card doesn't show up within 120 days, something's stuck in the workflow. Log into IACRA, check the application status, and call the Civil Aviation Registry if it's still in Pending or Approved state. The Registry's number is 405-954-3261 and they answer airman certification questions Monday through Friday during business hours.
One thing worth knowing: IACRA's status display lags real-world processing by a day or two. If your DPE says they submitted the result, but IACRA still shows Pending Examiner when you check the next morning, give it 48 hours before assuming something's broken. The system batches submissions to the Registry overnight, and the public-facing status sometimes takes an extra cycle to refresh. The temporary certificate in your hand is what matters legally — the database catch-up happens behind the scenes.
The temporary certificate the DPE hands you on checkride day is valid for 120 days. If the plastic card hasn't arrived by day 100, call the Civil Aviation Registry at 405-954-3261 and ask them to expedite. A lapsed temporary with no plastic card means you're not legally certified — and the fix is far easier when you call before the 120 days runs out. Don't ignore this. Pilots have grounded themselves accidentally by trusting the mail.
IACRA versus the old paper Form 8710 trips up military pilots, applicants without reliable internet, and a small slice of edge cases every year. The current rule is simple: IACRA is mandatory for virtually all civilian airman applications, with narrow exceptions. Military-to-civilian conversions (Form 8710-11) and a handful of other specialized applications still accept paper, and certain mechanic ratings route through paper because the IACRA mechanic module doesn't cover every scenario.
If you genuinely can't access the internet to use IACRA — which is rare in 2025 — you can request a paper application from the FSDO. The processing time stretches significantly compared to IACRA (8–12 weeks versus 7–14 days), so it's worth driving to a library to use IACRA if at all possible. Paper applications also have a higher rejection rate because they don't catch errors at submission the way IACRA's field validation does.
Don't reuse old saved 8710 PDFs from earlier years. The FAA revises the form every couple of years, and outdated revisions get rejected on receipt. If you absolutely must file paper, download a fresh copy from faa.gov the same week you're submitting it.

Pre-Submission IACRA Checklist
- ✓Legal name in IACRA matches your driver's license exactly — no nicknames
- ✓Date of birth in MM/DD/YYYY format, matches medical certificate
- ✓Current home address — same one on file with your AME and medical
- ✓FAA Tracking Number written down somewhere permanent (not just in IACRA)
- ✓Email address is one you'll keep for years — not a school or work account
- ✓Aeronautical experience hours match your logbook totals exactly
- ✓All required training endorsements present in your logbook and dated correctly
- ✓Knowledge Test passed and report uploaded or referenced (date and percentage)
- ✓Medical certificate current — class matches the certificate type you're applying for
- ✓CFI's name and certificate number ready for the recommendation step
- ✓DPE or FSDO contact info ready for scheduling after CFI signs off
- ✓Photo ID and logbook ready to bring to the practical test for verification
Common iacra faa errors fall into predictable categories. The first is the name mismatch. Your IACRA name has to match your driver's license exactly. If your license says Robert James Smith but you registered as Bob Smith, the application can't be processed. The fix is to log in, click Profile, and update your name — but you can't do this once an application is in flight. Catch it before you start.
The second common error is the address mismatch between IACRA and your medical certificate. Both records have to agree, or the Registry will hold the application for clarification. If you've moved recently, update your address on iacra.faa.gov first, then have your medical record updated by your AME if necessary.
The third — and probably most frustrating — is the date format issue. IACRA wants MM/DD/YYYY in U.S. format, not DD/MM or written-out months. Typing 'January 5, 2025' or '5/1/2025' (European format) into a date field kicks back a vague error message that doesn't tell you which field is wrong. If you get an unexplained error after clicking Submit, check every date field for the right format first.
IACRA vs Paper Form 8710: Strengths and Weaknesses
- +Free to use — no application fee, no per-submission charge, no premium tier
- +Processing time runs 7-14 business days vs 8-12 weeks for paper applications
- +Field validation catches typos at submission instead of weeks later by mail
- +Single FTN follows you for your entire pilot career — one record, no duplicates
- +CFI and DPE electronic signatures eliminate lost-in-mail and forgery risks
- +Status tracking shows exactly where your application sits in the workflow
- +Audit trail logs every session and edit — the FAA can trace any disputed action
- −Interface design is dated — short session timeouts, awkward navigation menus
- −Password reset requires phone call if you also forget security questions
- −Limited support hours — Civil Aviation Registry closes evenings and weekends
- −Field errors return vague messages that don't always identify the wrong field
- −Some applications (military conversions, certain mechanic paths) still need paper
- −Address and name updates can't happen while an application is in flight
- −Help desk wait times can hit 45 minutes during busy rule-change cycles
Password recovery on IACRA works the way you'd expect — click Forgot Password, enter your username or FTN, answer your security questions, and the system emails you a reset link. The security questions are the ones you picked at registration. If you also forgot the answers, the system can't reset you automatically. You'll need to call the FAA help desk at 1-877-287-6731 Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern, and they'll verify your identity over the phone before resetting the account.
Forgotten FTNs are easier — log into IACRA with your username and password, and your FTN appears in the upper-right corner of every page. If you also forgot the username, the help desk can look it up by your name and date of birth. Worst case, you can create a new account with the same legal name and the system will detect the existing FTN and link them. Don't do this without calling help desk first, though, because duplicate FTNs cause major problems downstream.
Security questions deserve a quick warning. IACRA defaults to a small list of preset questions — mother's maiden name, first pet, city of birth — and the answers are case-sensitive in some fields. Pick questions whose answers won't change over time and won't be guessable from your social media. If your mother's maiden name is public on Facebook, skip that one and use something less searchable. The help desk staff are friendly when they have to verify you, but it adds a 15-minute phone call to your day. Better to nail the security answers correctly at registration.
When to call the Airman Certification Branch directly: any time the system is broken in a way that the local FSDO can't fix. If your application has been stuck in Pending status for more than 14 business days with no movement, the Registry can look up the case and tell you what's holding it. If your plastic certificate hasn't arrived after 120 days — meaning your temporary is expiring — the Registry is the office that prints and mails the cards. They can expedite if you're about to lose privileges.
The Civil Aviation Registry phone is 405-954-3261, and the dedicated airman certification line is 405-954-3261 option 1. They're closed weekends and federal holidays. The wait can hit 45 minutes during busy weeks (after major rule changes, near tax season, etc.), so call early in the day if you can. Have your FTN, date of birth, and a reference to your specific application ready before you dial.
For application-specific issues that aren't yet stuck — questions about field formatting, what type of application to start, how to handle a name change — your CFI or DPE is almost always faster than the Registry. They've seen every scenario, and IACRA isn't complex enough to require Registry input for routine questions. Save the call for genuine roadblocks.
One final IACRA tip: the system logs every session, every edit, and every submission. If something goes wrong — your CFI's signature didn't take, your DPE submitted the wrong rating, your application disappeared from the queue — the audit trail is there. Email iacra.support@faa.gov with your FTN and a description of the issue, and the support team can pull the session log and trace exactly what happened.
Treat IACRA the way you'd treat any other federal system: read carefully, type slowly, save often, and don't click Submit until you've double-checked every field. The 30 minutes it takes to complete an application thoroughly saves you weeks of back-and-forth if a typo gets through. After three or four applications, the workflow becomes second nature — and you'll wonder how the industry ever managed with paper.
If you're heading toward your first IACRA application and you want to test your aviation knowledge before the practical, run through a few Airman Certification Standards sample questions first. Knowing the material cold makes both the written test and the IACRA submission far less stressful. The system is just paperwork — the real exam is what happens at the airport with the examiner.
A few last details that come up often. The IACRA session times out after roughly 15 minutes of inactivity, and the warning popup is easy to miss. If you're walking away from a long application to grab coffee or talk to your CFI, hit Save first. Lost work in a half-completed application is one of the more common help-desk calls, and there's no auto-recovery — the data simply isn't persisted until you click Save explicitly.
Browser compatibility used to be a headache but has improved. Chrome, Edge, and Firefox all work cleanly on desktop. Mobile browsers technically work but the form fields are cramped on a phone — fine for checking status, frustrating for filing a new application. Use a laptop or desktop when you can. Safari on macOS occasionally has quirks with the date picker; if you see odd behavior, switch to Chrome and the issue usually disappears.
FAA Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.