North Country Heli FlightHELICOPTER GROUND SCHOOL · ACS-ALIGNED
Private (PPL-H) · Lesson 01

ACS Alignment

FAA-S-ACS-15 — Private Pilot, Rotorcraft–Helicopter · Area of Operation I. Preflight Preparation · Task: Pilot Qualifications
PA.I.A.K1 — certificate & privileges/limits PA.I.A.K2 — currency & recent experience PA.I.A.K3 — medical / BasicMed

Pilot Qualifications, Currency & Medical

What keeps you legal to act as pilot in command.

By the end of this lesson you can:

1 · Privileges & limitations

A private pilot may act as PIC carrying passengers, but not for compensation or hire (with narrow cost-sharing exceptions). Your certificate must carry the rotorcraft category, helicopter class rating. Privileges and limitations live in 14 CFR 61.113.

2 · Staying current

RequirementRuleWhat it takes
Flight review61.56Every 24 calendar months: min. 1 hr ground + 1 hr flight with an authorized instructor, with a logbook endorsement.
Carrying passengers (day)61.57(a)3 takeoffs & 3 landings in the same category/class within the preceding 90 days.
Carrying passengers (night)61.57(b)3 takeoffs & landings to a full stop at night (1 hr after sunset to 1 hr before sunrise) within 90 days.

3 · Medical — third-class vs. BasicMed

Third-class medicalBasicMed (14 CFR 68)
HowFAA-designated AME examExam by any state-licensed physician using the FAA checklist + free online medical course every 24 months
RenewalEvery 24–60 months by agePhysician exam every 48 months; course every 24 months
LimitsStandardMust have held a valid medical after July 2006; aircraft ≤ 6,000 lb / ≤ 6 occupants; not for compensation

BasicMed is a self-assessment pathway — you still meet all flight-review and recency rules.

4 · Watch: BasicMed in plain English

Curated reference clip — “The Basics of BasicMed | Sporty's Pilot Tips,” Sporty's Pilot Shop (YouTube). Embedded with the creator's player; we don't host or alter it. Note: this is an airplane-oriented overview — the BasicMed rule itself is category-neutral and applies to rotorcraft, but confirm any aircraft weight/occupant limits against current 14 CFR Part 68.

5 · Current is not proficient

You can be legally current (you ticked the 90-day boxes) and still not be proficient (truly competent). Proficiency is the real goal; currency is the floor, not the ceiling. A returning or low-time pilot should fly to a personal standard well above the regulatory minimum.

6 · Reference sources

Read the actual rules & guidance

📄 14 CFR Part 61 (eCFR) — 61.56, 61.57, 61.113 📄 AOPA — BasicMed 📄 AOPA — Currency vs. Proficiency
Risk management (the “Consider”): currency lapses sneak up on people — a missed night landing or a flight review that quietly expired. Track your dates, and treat any lapse as a cue to fly with an instructor, not to stretch the rule.

7 · Knowledge check