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Why Flight Instructors Should Purchase a Non-Owned Liability Insurance Policy

As a flight instructor, chances are you will live a long life, fly thousands of hours, and instruct hundreds of students who go on to have many years of accident-free flying.

Unfortunately, aircraft are occasionally involved in accidents and flight instructors are blamed. Students and/or other third parties may even file a lawsuit against the flight instructor seeking monetary damages. Importantly, the non-owned insurance policy also covers the costs and expenses associated with defending you in court. Consider the following to help you build a solid risk management plan as it relates to your flight instruction business.

  • Build Solid Documentation: Regardless of the type of instruction you are providing, documentation is critical to create a history of what happened. The Federal Aviation Regulation 61.189 provides a minimum standard of what flight instructors must document:
  1. Signing the logbook of each person to whom the instructor has given flight or ground training.
  2. Maintain a separate record of each student the instructor has endorsed for solo flight, the date of the endorsement and anyone who you have endorsed for a knowledge test or a practical test. The record must contain the kind of test, date, and the results. Going above and beyond this MINIMUM requirement will help defend you in the event of a lawsuit.
  • Keep Your Records for More than Three Years: No one knows what the future will hold, but luck always favors the prepared. Keeping records longer than the minimum requirement will certainly come in handy if a lawsuit is filed against you. By exceeding this basic and minimum requirement, you will also build your credibility as an operator who will go above and beyond.
  • Make Notes on Every Flight: Keep accurate records of any ground instruction given and what topics you covered. Consider using an electronic platform to capture more information and make recordkeeping more accurate and less cumbersome. There are some third-party vendors who provide platforms specifically designed for Part 61 or Part 141 flight training operations. 
  • Transfer Your Risk: We encourage any flight instructor who is providing services to an aircraft owner to secure through the aircraft owner’s policy, an additional insured endorsement and a waiver of subrogation. This will provide an initial layer of coverage if something goes awry during the flight. As an additional insured in the owner’s policy, you are afforded certain coverages in the event a third party makes a claim against you. The waiver of subrogation precludes the owner’s insurance company from making a claim against you for damaging the aircraft. 
  • Insure Your Risk: A non-owned aircraft liability policy covers your legal liability arising out of the use of a third party’s aircraft. If you are sued, the insurance company has two basic responsibilities:
  1. Defend – which means hiring an attorney, and experts if needed, to protect your legal interests in the matter 
  2. Indemnify – if you are found negligent then the insurance company will pay those sums which you are legally obligated to pay, up to the limit of liability in the policy. 

If you are employed by a flight school and the flight school has insurance, then you are likely covered by their policy for flight instruction given during the course and scope of your employment with the flight school. If you elect to provide flight instruction outside of your employment with the flight school, then you will need to consider your own insurance coverage. You may only provide a flight review or an IPC to some select clients outside of your employment. In these cases, the flight school will not be able to help and you will need your own policy to defend you, or slug it out on your own, which again may really put a damper on your pocket book. 

Knowing the Law and Dealing with It

Generally, the courts will not hold an educational facility liable for the training they provide. As an example, universities are not sued for their graduate’s liability. How would society ever be able to function if a learning institution could not train doctors, nurses or other professional trades such as engineers? Outside of a university, professional flight instructors are just that – a for-hire business, therefore some courts have allowed lawsuits to move forward as it relates to a for hire flight training institution.

There are ways to protect yourself and your future. Documentation, record retention, transferring your risk, and insuring your risk are just a few measures you can take to protect yourself.

AssuredPartners Aerospace is AOPA’s partner for CFI NonOwned Aircraft Insurance. Our aviation insurance specialists can give you examples of how each coverage applies to your individual situation and help you figure out the right coverage for you, at the price you can afford. Plus, AOPA members save 5%.

Visit www.assuredpartners.com/rent today to learn more and start your policy in minutes. Or call 800-622-2672 today to speak with one of our experts. We look forward to serving all your aviation insurance needs.

Topics: Insurance, Ownership, Insurance
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AssuredPartners Aerospace

As AOPA’s strategic partner for aviation insurance, AssuredPartners Aerospace, one of the nation’s largest aviation insurance firms, provides the absolute best insurance protection to fit your needs. Whether you’re flying your own airplane, renting, instructing, or running an aviation business, we have an unmatched depth of knowledge and resources driven by the desire to set a new standard for service and responsiveness. With more than 25 years’ experience serving pilots’ aviation insurance needs, our expertise has been developed over years of working closely with the nation’s best insurance carriers. We understand the exposures that make aviation insurance unique.