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PPL(A) Theory Examination Austria: Format & Procedure

The PPL(A) theory examination in Austria is administered by Austro Control and consists of nine separate multiple-choice subjects. Here you will find everything you need to know about how the examination works, the time limits that apply, and what to keep in mind on exam day.

Overview: What to Expect

The PPL(A) theory examination in Austria is harmonised Europe-wide under Part-FCL and is administered by Austro Control. Testing is conducted by computer (CBT – Computer Based Testing), typically at the Vienna-Schwechat location or at authorised examination sites. All questions are drawn from the ECQB (European Central Question Bank) of EASA – a centralised, non-public question bank that is updated on a regular basis.

You sit all nine subjects as separate examinations. Each subject must be passed individually.

The Nine Subjects in Detail

For the PPL(A) you must complete the following subjects:

  1. Air Law
  2. Human Performance
  3. Meteorology
  4. Communications (VFR)
  5. Principles of Flight
  6. Operational Procedures
  7. Flight Performance and Planning
  8. Aircraft General Knowledge
  9. Navigation

The number of questions per subject varies: smaller subjects such as Communications or Operational Procedures contain 12–16 questions, while larger subjects such as Navigation or Meteorology contain up to 30 questions.

Question Format

All questions are multiple choice with four answer options (A, B, C, D), with exactly one correct answer. There is no penalty for incorrect answers – you should therefore answer every question, even if you have to guess.

Questions are generally available in German; at Austro Control you may choose your language (German or English). Note: some ECQB questions are translated directly from English – if a phrasing seems unusual, checking the original English term can help.

Pass Mark: 75 Percent

You must answer at least 75 % of questions correctly in each individual subject. There is no overall grade – a 95 % result in Meteorology does not compensate for a 70 % result in Air Law. If you fail one subject, you only need to retake that subject.

Time Limits

The time allocated per subject depends on the number of questions. You have approximately 75 seconds per question, which in practice is very comfortable. Indicative figures:

The exact times are displayed on screen before each subject. Within a subject you can navigate forwards and backwards between questions and review flagged questions at the end.

Attempts and Deadlines

Key rules under Part-FCL.025:

If you miss a deadline, you must resit all subjects – including those already passed.

Registration and Prerequisites

Registration for the theory examination is handled through your ATO (Approved Training Organisation) or DTO. Prerequisites:

Examination fees at Austro Control are in the low double-digit euro range per subject; exact amounts are subject to change – check the current fee schedule on the Austro Control website.

Strategy: How Many Sittings Should You Plan?

Two to three sittings is the norm. A well-established grouping:

Completing everything in a single day is possible, but demanding. Plan realistically.

Tips for Exam Day

After the Examination

Your result is generally displayed immediately upon completion of each subject on screen. A written confirmation follows via the Austro Control eGov portal. Passed subjects remain valid until the end of your examination session.

If you practise systematically – ideally using current ECQB-style questions rather than textbooks alone – the examination is very manageable. Most candidates pass their subjects on the first attempt, provided they do not underestimate the workload.

Frequently asked questions

How many attempts do I have per subject?

You have a maximum of 4 attempts per subject. In addition, you may use no more than 6 sittings within one examination session, and all 9 subjects must be passed within 18 months of your first attempt.

How long are the passed theory subjects valid?

Once you have passed all 9 subjects, you have 24 months to complete the PPL(A) practical skill test. After that, your theory credits expire and you would need to resit them.

What aids are permitted in the examination?

Permitted aids are a non-programmable calculator, a flight computer (E6B or CRP-1), plotter, and dividers. Charts, tables, and performance diagrams are provided by Austro Control. Personal notes, mobile phones, and smartwatches are not permitted.

Can I sit the theory examination in English?

Yes, at Austro Control you may choose between German and English. The original ECQB questions are written in English – candidates who read technical English fluently avoid any ambiguity introduced by translation.

Do I have to sit all 9 subjects on the same day?

No. You may spread the subjects across up to 6 sittings, as long as you pass all of them within 18 months of your first attempt. Two to three sittings is the common and recommended approach.

More articles: Pruefung

As of: 2026-05-19T16:47:47.633029+00:00. This article is a guide and does not replace official authority information or training at an approved ATO. Regulations may change — for legally binding information consult your competent aviation authority (BAZL in CH, LBA in DE, Austro Control in AT) or your flight school directly.

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