Definition
An FAA-published document that specifies the knowledge areas, flight tasks, and minimum performance levels an applicant must demonstrate to pass a practical test (checkride) for a pilot certificate or rating. Each PTS lists the required Areas of Operation, the specific Tasks within each area, the references the examiner draws from, and the tolerances (such as altitude, heading, and airspeed limits) the applicant must meet. The PTS has been progressively replaced by the Airman Certification Standards (ACS) for most certificates and ratings, but the term is still used in instructor training materials and in some remaining test standards.
Plain English
An official FAA rulebook for checkrides. It tells the student exactly what they have to know, what maneuvers they have to fly, and how accurately they have to fly them in order to pass.
Context Anchor
You may see PTS mentioned when planning training, preparing for a checkride, or discussing how an instructor measures whether a student is ready for the test.
Derivation
"Practical" because it covers the hands-on portion of the test (the actual flying and oral exam), as opposed to the written knowledge test. "Standards" because it sets the minimum performance levels the applicant must meet.
Why Pilots Care
They define exactly what must be demonstrated on a checkride, so pilots know what to prepare for and what standards they will be held to.
Intuition Check
Practical does not mean casual or informal here. It means a hands-on test of flying knowledge and skill. Standards are not suggestions; they are the stated FAA performance levels used to judge the test.
Example Sentence 1
Before her checkride, she reviewed the Practical Test Standards to confirm the altitude tolerance for steep turns.
Example Sentence 2
Instructors review the PTS with students to ensure all required maneuvers are practiced to the specified standards.