FAA N-Number Registration: Complete 2026 Aircraft Registration Guide
Complete FAA N-number registration guide. Learn how to register, renew, search aircraft N-numbers, fees, timelines, and renewal requirements.

Every aircraft you see flying in United States airspace carries a tail number that starts with the letter N. That single letter, followed by up to five characters, is the aircraft's FAA N-number, and it works a lot like a license plate on a car. The Federal Aviation Administration assigns these registrations, tracks the ownership behind them, and renews them on a strict three-year cycle. If you fly, plan to buy a plane, or simply want to look up who owns that Cessna parked at your local airport, understanding the N-number system is essential.
This guide walks through how the registration process actually works in 2026, what the FAA Registry expects you to submit, how long approvals take, and the renewal rules that catch a surprising number of owners off guard. We will cover initial registration, re-registration, ownership transfers, fee changes, and the public search tools anyone can use. Whether you are a first-time buyer working through Aircraft Bill of Sale paperwork or a CFI prepping students for the airman knowledge test, you will find the practical details you need below.
Quick reminder before we dive in. N-number rules are governed by 14 CFR Part 47, and the FAA Aircraft Registration Branch in Oklahoma City handles every submission. Mistakes are common. A missing signature or the wrong fee can push your registration back by weeks, and you cannot fly an unregistered aircraft. Read carefully, double-check forms, and when in doubt call the Civil Aviation Registry directly.
FAA Registration by the Numbers
What Is an FAA N-Number?
The N-number is the unique alphanumeric identifier the FAA assigns to civilian aircraft registered in the United States. Think of it as the aircraft's legal identity. It appears on the side of the fuselage or tail in painted characters at least twelve inches tall for fixed-wing planes, and it stays with the airframe unless the owner formally changes it through a process called an N-number reservation request.
Why the letter N? It is a holdover from the International Radiotelegraph Convention of 1927. Each country got assigned a prefix range. The US got N, Canada got C, the UK got G, and so on. Every civil aircraft worldwide carries that country prefix, which is why ATC controllers can identify nationality the moment a callsign hits the radio.
Format Rules for N-Numbers
The FAA permits between one and five characters after the N. Numbers come first. Letters, if any, come at the end. You cannot use the letters I or O because they look too much like 1 and 0. So N12345 works, N123AB works, but N12I3 does not. The maximum is five characters total after the N.

Don't confuse the N-number with the manufacturer's serial number. The N-number is administrative and can change when an owner requests a different one. The serial number is permanent, stamped into the airframe by the builder, and never changes for the life of the aircraft. Both appear on the registration certificate, but only one travels with the airplane forever.
Who Needs to Register an Aircraft?
Federal law requires registration for any civil aircraft operated within US airspace. This includes single-engine pistons, turbines, helicopters, gliders, balloons, and even some ultralight conversions. The owner of record, meaning the person or entity holding legal title, is the one who files. If you bought a plane and have not transferred registration yet, you cannot legally fly it. The FAA grants a temporary pink-slip authorization that lets you operate during the application window, but that grace period is limited.
Exceptions exist for public aircraft (military and certain government-operated planes) and for aircraft registered in foreign countries that temporarily enter US airspace. Public aircraft follow separate registration tracks managed by the relevant agency.
The Registration Workflow
Sign AC Form 8050-2 Bill of Sale with the seller. Get original signatures of every party named on the current registration.
Fill in the Aircraft Registration Application. Blue or black ink, no whiteout, no photocopies. Original signatures required.
Include a check or money order payable to FAA. Credit cards work via the online portal, mail-in needs paper payment.
Send Bill of Sale, application, and fee to the FAA Aircraft Registration Branch. USPS, FedEx, and UPS all accepted.
Operate the aircraft up to 90 days using the Bill of Sale and pink-copy of Form 8050-1 as temporary authority.
Within 4-8 weeks the FAA mails AC Form 8050-3, the permanent Certificate of Aircraft Registration. Keep it onboard.
Required Forms and Documents
The FAA wants original signatures on everything. Here is what the file should contain when it lands in Oklahoma City.
AC Form 8050-1 (Aircraft Registration Application) is the main form. It captures the owner's legal name, mailing address, citizenship, the N-number, the aircraft make and model, and serial number. Trusts, LLCs, partnerships, and individuals each have slightly different filing requirements. Non-citizen trusts in particular face extra scrutiny under enhanced disclosure rules adopted in 2019.
AC Form 8050-2 (Aircraft Bill of Sale) documents the transfer of ownership. Every seller in the chain of title must sign. If the aircraft passed through multiple owners since the last FAA-recorded transfer, you need a bill of sale from each link in the chain. This is where most rejection letters originate.
Evidence of Ownership matters too. If you are not buying from the previous registered owner, you need supporting documentation. Court orders, probate records, repossession titles, and security agreements all count, but each requires specific filing format.
Registration by Owner Type
Provide full legal name, residential address, date of birth, and citizenship declaration. Spouses can register jointly with both signatures on the application form. Sole proprietors register under their personal name unless they hold an EIN under a registered DBA.
The Three-Year Re-Registration Rule
Here is the rule that catches owners off guard. Every N-number registration expires three years from the date the FAA issued it. The agency mails renewal notices roughly six months before expiration to the address on file, but those notices have a habit of disappearing into spam folders or unattended PO boxes. If your registration lapses, the N-number returns to the available pool after a 90-day grace period, and the aircraft becomes illegal to fly.
Renewal is straightforward when handled on time. The FAA charges another $5, you confirm the information on AC Form 8050-1B (the re-registration form), and you mail it back. The new certificate arrives within a few weeks. The painful scenario is letting renewal lapse, having someone else claim your N-number, and then needing to re-register the aircraft with a new identifier — a process that involves repainting the tail, updating insurance documents, and notifying your A&P mechanic.

The FAA's renewal notices arrive 180 days before expiration, but they go to the address on the registry. If you have moved, sold the aircraft, or simply stopped checking the registered mailing address, you may never see the notice. Add a personal reminder 200 days before your registration expires.
How to Search the FAA Registry
The FAA Aircraft Registry maintains a free public search tool anyone can use. It is the same database insurance underwriters, mechanics, and prospective buyers all rely on. You can search by N-number, by owner name, or by aircraft serial number. Results include the registered owner, mailing address (corporate addresses are public; individual residential addresses were partially redacted in 2023), aircraft make and model, year of manufacture, engine type, and current registration status.
The registry website (registry.faa.gov) updates roughly every 48 hours. For real-time tracking of who is flying where, you need ADS-B data sources, but for ownership and certification information the FAA database is authoritative.
What the Search Will Not Show You
The public search omits a few items. Lease arrangements, operating agreements, and beneficial-owner details for trusts do not appear in the free search. To pull those records you need a Certified Title Search from a private title company that pulls the full FAA records package — typically $80 to $150 depending on the firm.
Pre-Submission Checklist
- ✓Original AC Form 8050-1 with all required signatures
- ✓Original AC Form 8050-2 Bill of Sale signed by every seller in the chain
- ✓$5 fee in check or money order payable to FAA
- ✓Photocopy of buyer's government-issued ID for individuals
- ✓Trust agreement or LLC documents if applicable
- ✓Affidavit of US citizenship signed and notarized
- ✓Complete copy of the entire packet for your own records
- ✓Trackable shipping with delivery confirmation to OKC
Common Registration Mistakes
The Registration Branch rejects roughly 15% of submissions on first review. The reasons are nearly always paperwork issues rather than substantive problems with the aircraft itself. Knowing the common pitfalls saves weeks.
Wrong N-number format trips up first-timers. Using letters I or O, exceeding five characters after the N, or including hyphens or spaces. The format is strict.
Missing signatures in the chain of title is the single most common rejection cause. If the aircraft passed through three owners since the last FAA-recorded transfer, you need bills of sale from all three. The buyer cannot skip ahead in the paper trail.
Photocopied forms get bounced. The FAA requires original ink signatures on AC Form 8050-1 and 8050-2. Digitally-signed PDFs and photocopies get rejected. The agency is studying electronic signatures, but as of 2026 still requires paper.
Address mismatches cause delays too. The address on Form 8050-1 must match the address on the citizenship affidavit and any LLC formation documents.
And believe it or not, owners regularly forget the $5 check. The application sits in limbo until someone calls to ask. Set the fee aside in an envelope before you fill out anything.
Mail-In vs Online Registration
- +Online portal accepts credit cards (no paper check needed)
- +Faster processing — typically 2-3 weeks vs 4-8 weeks
- +Immediate confirmation email when submitted
- +Automatic renewal reminders via email
- +Digital storage of certificate copies in your account
- −Online portal only supports certain transactions (renewal, not initial)
- −Initial registration still requires mailing original Bill of Sale
- −Trust and LLC filings often need paper backup
- −Account creation requires PLN (Personal Locator Number)
- −System occasionally times out during high-traffic periods
N-Number Reservations
Want a specific tail number? The FAA lets you reserve any available N-number for one year at a cost of $10. You can renew the reservation annually, but you cannot sit on a reservation forever without taking ownership of an aircraft. The FAA does periodic audits and pulls inactive reservations from holders who haven't made progress toward registration.
Reservations are first-come, first-served, and the popular numbers (single digits, repeating patterns like N111 or N222, pilot initials) have waiting lists stretching back years. The reservation system is online at registry.faa.gov, and you can search availability in real time before committing your money.
Once you own an aircraft and want to apply your reserved N-number, you file AC Form 8050-64 (Assignment of Special Registration Numbers). The current N-number on the aircraft becomes available again, and your reserved number takes its place on the registry. You will need to repaint the tail to match. The FAA gives 90 days to comply with the markings rule.
International Considerations
An N-numbered aircraft is recognized worldwide. If you fly internationally, you need additional documentation including a Radio Station License (FCC Form 605) for any aircraft equipped with radios used outside US airspace, a current registration certificate, and an Aircraft Airworthiness Certificate. Some countries require advance notification of arrival, but the N-number itself is universally accepted.
Owners who relocate abroad sometimes try to keep their US registration to avoid the paperwork of importing the aircraft to the new country. This works only if the aircraft genuinely remains based in the US for at least 50% of its operating time. Permanent overseas basing triggers FAA review and can result in deregistration if the agency determines the plane is no longer principally based domestically.

International Basing Quick Facts
Tracking Registration Status Online
Once your application is submitted, you can check status by calling the Aircraft Registration Branch (405-954-3116) or using the online inquiry tool. The portal updates within 24 hours of significant status changes. The states you will see include Received, Under Review, Pending Documents, Approved, and Issued. Each transition has a typical timeline, and delays usually mean a missing item the FAA has not yet flagged in a formal letter to your mailing address.
The most frustrating stage is Pending Documents because the FAA letter takes a week or more to arrive in the mail. If you see your file stuck in that status for more than ten days, call the registry directly and ask what is missing. Phone staff can usually tell you the specific issue immediately, saving days of waiting on a slow postal response.
Selling an Aircraft: The Other Side
If you are the seller, your obligations are simpler but equally important. Sign AC Form 8050-2 (Bill of Sale), surrender the current registration certificate, and notify the FAA in writing once the sale closes. Failure to notify can leave you on the registry as the apparent owner months after the sale, which creates problems if the new owner has an accident or runs afoul of the law.
Some sellers use escrow services for high-value transactions. Aircraft escrow companies hold funds, verify clear title, file FAA paperwork on behalf of both parties, and ensure everything records correctly. Cost is typically $400 to $800 depending on transaction complexity, and most lenders require escrow for aircraft financed through commercial banks.
Title Companies and Escrow Services
For anything beyond a simple owner-to-owner cash sale, most aviation professionals route the transaction through a title company. These firms specialize in aircraft transfers and offer three core services: title search, escrow holding, and FAA filing. A title search confirms the chain of ownership going back to the aircraft's first registration and lists every recorded lien against the airframe.
If the previous owner financed the plane through a bank, that loan creates a lien on the aircraft record, and the lien must be released before clean title can transfer. Escrow holding solves the chicken-and-egg problem of large aircraft transactions. The buyer doesn't want to wire $400,000 to a stranger before seeing clean title transfer. The seller doesn't want to hand over a Bill of Sale until the money clears.
An escrow company holds both items, verifies the FAA paperwork is filed correctly, and releases funds to the seller while sending the registration package to the FAA. FAA filing is the third service. Title companies have established relationships with the Registration Branch and know exactly how to package documents so they don't get rejected.
Top Aircraft Title Companies
Oklahoma City-based, longest-established firm. Handles title search, escrow, and FAA filing. Typical fee $400-$600 per transaction depending on complexity and loan involvement.
Full-service aviation title and escrow. Strong relationships with lenders financing turbine and corporate aircraft. Online status tracking for in-flight transactions.
Title-search specialists. Faster turnaround on basic searches (often same-day). Less expensive when you only need a title search without escrow services.
Boutique firm focused on high-value warbirds and antique aircraft. Specialized knowledge of pre-1970 registrations and military surplus paper trails.
Liens and Encumbrances
Any recorded security interest on the aircraft shows up in the FAA records. Banks that finance aircraft purchases file what's called a UCC-1 financing statement plus an FAA-specific Aircraft Security Agreement. The lien stays attached to the N-number until the bank files a release after the loan is paid off.
A common nightmare scenario: you buy an aircraft, register it in your name, and then discover six months later that the previous owner never satisfied their loan. The bank's lien transfers with the aircraft, and you may be on the hook for thousands in legal fees to clear it. Pre-purchase title searches protect you against problems that can take years and tens of thousands of dollars to unwind.
Aircraft Salvage and Wrecked Aircraft
When an aircraft is wrecked beyond economical repair, the insurance company typically pays out the policy limit and takes ownership of the salvage. The salvage goes through one of several auction houses, and the new buyer registers the wreck under their name as a project.
If the new owner rebuilds the aircraft to airworthy condition, a Designated Airworthiness Representative inspects the work and issues a new airworthiness certificate. The N-number can either stay with the rebuilt aircraft or be replaced if the new owner prefers something different. Salvage titles are legal and common in the homebuilt and warbird communities.
Common Registration Issues by Aircraft Type
Homebuilt aircraft require additional documentation including builder's logs, photos of construction milestones, and a notarized statement that you (the builder) completed at least 51% of the airframe. The FAA designation Experimental — Amateur Built carries specific operating limitations that don't apply to certified aircraft.
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.