NBAA Welcomes FAA Extensions to SFAR 118 Medical Certification, Training Deadlines

June 26, 2020

The National Business Aviation Association (NBAA) today welcomed an announcement by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) of upcoming amendments to Special Federal Aviation Regulation (SFAR) 118 extending validity on certain medical, training and testing requirements by up to three additional months.

The agency issued SFAR 118 on April 29, 2020, in response to concerns raised by NBAA and other industry stakeholders about pilot training, currency and medical certifications due to expire as the nation grappled with the COVID-19 pandemic. As deadlines neared for the FAA’s extensions on those certifications, NBAA appealed to the agency for additional relief.

The revised document grants a three-month extension beyond the original expiration date on medical certificates due to expire in July, August and September, 2020, and extensions for other regulatory requirements such as certain flight reviews, crew requirements and provisions addressing large aircraft and unmanned aircraft systems, among others.

“The amendment recognizes that even as stay-at-home advisories are lifted, airmen continue to experience difficulty complying with certain training, recency, checking, testing and duration requirements,” the agency noted in its announcement of the upcoming amended SFAR, which will be published in the Federal Register on June 29.

NBAA has remained engaged with regulators in recent months, as extended stay-at-home orders and social-distancing guidance have continued to restrict availability of safe or practical means of renewing those certifications.

“We are pleased the FAA recognized the unprecedented situation that general aviation pilots and operators continue to face during this crisis, and we thank the agency for responding to the ongoing concerns of NBAA and other industry stakeholders in granting these extensions,” said NBAA President and CEO Ed Bolen.

The FAA emphasized this and other “limited extensions” to earlier deadlines under SFAR 118 are to allow flexibility in scheduling necessary medical certification and training events as the nation continues to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, and that certificate holders “should seek to schedule those events as soon as it is practical and safe to do so given individual circumstances.”