I've been doing a lot of searching on "AME" and while the certification looks solid on paper, I'm getting mixed signals about how much employers actually care in 2026.
Some job postings list it as required, some say "preferred," and some don't mention it at all even for roles where it seems relevant.
For those of you who have your AME certification — has it actually opened doors or increased your rate? Or has the job market shifted to the point where it's table stakes rather than a differentiator?
Context: I'm already working in the field and trying to decide whether to prioritize AME or invest the same time into AME - Aircraft Maintenance Engineer.
Also — how current does the cert need to be? If I pass now, is a 2-3 year old cert still valuable or do employers want recent?
The free ame aircraft systems structures helped me understand what the exam actually tests rather than just what the material covers.
Passed AME 3 months ago. Happy to share what I remember.
On the "AME exam" stuff specifically — I found the practice tests here were actually harder than the real exam on those questions. Which was great because going in I felt more prepared than I needed to be.
The time pressure is real though. I came in with maybe 8 minutes to spare and that was after skipping the ones I wasn't sure about and coming back.
Don't try to cram the night before. Seriously. Last-minute stress makes you second-guess things you actually know.
The honest answer is: it depends a lot on your background.
If you're already working in this field, the AME exam is testing knowledge you probably use daily. The "AME" sections will feel familiar.
If you're coming in from outside, give yourself an extra 2 weeks and really focus on the practical application questions.
The practice tests here are worth doing repeatedly — I did the same test bank multiple times and found new questions I'd missed each time.
Quick data point: I spent 8 weeks studying, 1-3 hours a day, and passed with a 86%.
The section on AME exam took me the longest to feel confident about. Eventually I just drilled practice questions until I could answer them without hesitation.
What testing center did you end up booking? Some of them have much shorter wait times than others right now.
Quick update since I've been lurking this thread. I just hit 82% on a full practice run last night, which is the first time I've cracked 80, so I'm finally feeling like the material is sticking instead of just memorizing. I've been grinding the free ame troubleshooting repair practices pretty much every day on my lunch break and that's where most of my gains came from. The troubleshooting stuff was killing me early on.
As for whether employers care, I can't really speak to that yet since I'm not certified, but my plan is to sit the real exam in about three weeks once I'm consistently above 85. Figured even if some postings say "preferred," it can't hurt to have it. I'd rather have it and not need it than the other way around.
Honestly, I think the certification matters more than those job postings make it look. The ones that say "preferred" still tend to filter for it once you're actually in the interview, and I've had two managers basically admit the AME was what moved my resume to the top of the pile. So even when it's not listed as required, it's doing work behind the scenes. Don't read too much into the postings that skip it. A lot of those get copy-pasted by HR people who don't really know the role.
As for fitting it in, I work full time and have kids, so I get the schedule worry. What saved me was studying in small chunks instead of trying to carve out big study blocks that never happened. I did like 30 minutes before work and ran through practice questions on my phone during lunch. Some nights I was too fried to do anything and that's fine, you just pick it back up the next day. It took me a few months going slow like that, but it wasn't nearly as brutal as I'd built it up to be in my head. If you're on the fence, get it. It's one of those things you won't regret having.
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