Medical Requirements for Helicopter Pilots

Medical Requirements for Helicopter Pilots (What Actually Disqualifies You)

June 30, 20265 min read

The medical question is one of the most common things prospective students ask about — and one of the most commonly misunderstood. Most people who worry they’ll be disqualified won’t be. The conditions that actually ground pilots are narrower than most people assume.

Here’s how the FAA medical system works for helicopter pilots, what each class of medical requires, and what genuinely disqualifies you.

The Three Classes of FAA Medical

The FAA issues three classes of medical certificates, each with different standards and required renewal intervals.

Third-Class Medical is the minimum for private pilot operations — flying for personal use, not for compensation. It requires an exam by an Aviation Medical Examiner (AME), a doctor certified by the FAA to conduct aviation physicals. The exam covers vision, hearing, blood pressure, cardiovascular function, and general health. A third-class medical is valid for 60 months (five years) for pilots under 40, and 24 months (two years) for pilots 40 and older.

Second-Class Medical is required for commercial pilot operations — any time you’re being paid to fly. The standards are somewhat stricter, and the certificate is valid for 12 months for commercial privileges.

BasicMed is an alternative to a third-class medical for private pilot operations. Introduced in 2017, BasicMed allows pilots to fly light aircraft for personal use after a physical exam by any state-licensed physician (not an AME) plus a one-time online course. For helicopter pilots, BasicMed applies to helicopters with a maximum certificated takeoff weight of 6,000 pounds or less — which covers the R22, R44, and many other training and recreational helicopters.

What the Exam Actually Checks

A standard aviation medical exam covers:

  • Vision: Corrected vision to 20/40 is acceptable for third-class; 20/20 corrected for second-class. Color vision is tested — certain color deficiencies can affect certificate privileges but don’t automatically disqualify.
  • Hearing: Ability to hear a conversational voice at six feet.
  • Blood pressure: Generally below 155/95 for initial certification; controlled hypertension with medication is often acceptable.
  • Cardiovascular: EKG is required at age 35 and every two years after that for first-class medicals; for second- and third-class, the AME uses clinical judgment.
  • Neurological: History of epilepsy, seizure disorders, or certain other neurological conditions requires special evaluation.
  • Mental health: History of certain psychiatric conditions, substance dependence, or psychoactive medication use is reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

Conditions That Actually Disqualify (And Conditions That Don’t)

Conditions that are disqualifying without a Special Issuance:

  • Epilepsy or seizure disorders (even well-controlled)
  • Bipolar disorder
  • Severe personality disorders
  • Substance dependence (alcohol or drugs) — without sufficient recovery period and documentation
  • Certain cardiac conditions (recent MI, angina, cardiac valve replacement)
  • Diabetes requiring insulin (though Special Issuance is possible with thorough documentation)

Conditions that are often NOT disqualifying:

  • Controlled hypertension on medication (very common, routinely certified)
  • ADHD — frequently certified with appropriate evaluation and documentation; stimulant medications require review
  • Depression and anxiety — mild to moderate, well-controlled, often certifiable; depends heavily on medication
  • Vision requiring correction — glasses or contacts are fine for all classes
  • Previous cancer — depends on type, treatment, and time since completion
  • Kidney stones, past surgeries, most orthopedic issues — generally not disqualifying

The critical point: many conditions that people assume are disqualifying are handled through the Special Issuance process, where the FAA reviews medical records and, if satisfied, issues a certificate with specific conditions attached. Special Issuances take longer than a standard medical but are granted regularly for a wide range of conditions.

The Smart Move if You Have a Health Concern

If you have a medical history that you think might be an issue, do two things before you spend money on flight training:

First, use the FAA’s AEROMEDICAL CERTIFICATION DIVISION’s online resources. The FAA publishes guidance on which conditions require Special Issuance and what documentation is needed. Search for “FAA AEROMEDICAL” to find the current reference materials.

Second, consider an SI pre-application consultation. Some AMEs specialize in complex medical situations and can give you an honest assessment of your certification prospects before you formally apply. A consultation fee is much cheaper than discovering mid-training that your medical situation is more complex than you thought.

Third, don’t self-disqualify. Many pilots avoid pursuing their certificate because they assume a health condition means automatic disqualification. In most cases, that assumption is wrong. Get an actual assessment from a qualified AME before making that call.

For Private Flying: BasicMed Lowers the Bar

If your goal is private flying — getting your private certificate and flying for personal use — BasicMed is worth knowing about. It was specifically created to give pilots a path to certification without going through the full AME process, using their regular doctor instead. The online course is straightforward and the physical isn’t aviation-specific.

BasicMed doesn’t work for commercial operations. But for recreational helicopter flying in aircraft under 6,000 pounds, it’s a legitimate and accessible option.

The Bottom Line

Most people who are worried about the medical exam will pass it. The conditions that actually result in denial — without any path to Special Issuance — are a relatively short list. If you have a health concern, get it evaluated before you let it stop you.

The free Getting Started with Helicopters course covers the basics of what training looks like, so you can assess the full picture before committing. The medical is one piece of that picture — and for most people, not the obstacle they fear it will be.

helicopter traininggetting started
blog author image

Ryan Dale

Ryan has been flying helicopters since 2000. As a flight instructor, he has helped hundreds of people learn how to fly helicopters and has reached over 10,000 more through his work as an author. Ryan built this course to share his passion for helicopters. He has developed several FAA-certified 141 training courses and most recently served overseas as a Contract Pilot and Flight Instructor certified under the Army's 95-20 rules. Ryan has authored two books, the "Helicopter Oral Exam Guide" and the "Helicopter Maneuvers Manual," to assist fellow helicopter pilots in passing their FAA check rides.

Back to Blog
3
  • 208-495-5587

  • 2600A E Seltice Way, #152,

    Post Falls, ID 83854

3G Heli Prep Copyright 2024" to "3G Heli Prep Copyright 2026