Definition
An introductory flight given to a prospective student or new pilot to expose them to the aircraft, the flight environment, and the experience of flying, without formal training objectives or a structured lesson plan.
Plain English
A first flight designed to let someone get a feel for being in the aircraft and see what flying is actually like, before any real training begins.
Context Anchor
You may see this term in instructor training material, flight school introductions, and early student pilot training discussions.
Derivation
From 'familiarize,' meaning to make someone comfortable or acquainted with something. The word comes from the Latin familiaris, meaning 'of the household' — close, known, not strange. A familiarization flight is meant to make the cockpit feel less foreign.
Why Pilots Care
It lowers initial anxiety and helps confirm the student’s commitment before structured lessons start.
Intuition Check
A familiarization flight is not a test flight and does not mean the person is ready to fly alone. It is mainly for getting acquainted with the aircraft and the training environment.
Example Sentence 1
The flight school offered a thirty-minute familiarization flight so prospective students could experience the cockpit before committing to lessons.
Example Sentence 2
During the familiarization flight the student tried gentle turns and felt how the airplane responded.