AviaSkill
Instrument Rating Knowledge Test

Prepare for the FAA Instrument Rating Written Exam

Instrument procedures, navigation systems, weather theory, and IFR regulations — all covered with AI-powered explanations and adaptive study tools aligned to the FAA Airman Certification Standards.

7-day free trial. No credit card required. Full access to all IFR content.

7
ACS Knowledge Areas
60
Questions Per Exam
120 min
Exam Time Limit
70%
Passing Score

What is the FAA Instrument Rating Knowledge Test?

The Instrument Rating Knowledge Test is the written exam required before you can earn your Instrument Rating — the qualification that allows you to fly in instrument meteorological conditions (IMC), including clouds, low visibility, and controlled airspace under IFR flight rules.

The exam covers 7 knowledge areas defined by the FAA Airman Certification Standards (ACS), focusing on instrument flight procedures, navigation systems, weather analysis, and IFR regulations. You'll have 120 minutes to answer 60 multiple-choice questions, and you need a score of 70% or higher to pass.

The IFR written exam is widely considered more challenging than the PPL test — not because of the format, but because the material is more technical. Topics include interpreting approach plates, understanding navigation systems (VOR, GPS, ILS), analyzing complex weather phenomena, and applying intricate regulatory requirements. A solid study plan with quality practice questions makes a significant difference.

All 7 ACS Knowledge Areas — Fully Covered

Every topic tested on the Instrument Rating Knowledge Test, organized by the FAA Airman Certification Standards.

I

Preflight Preparation

Pilot qualifications, weather information for IFR flight, cross-country flight planning, instrument/equipment requirements

II

Preflight Procedures

Instrument cockpit check, IFR flight plan filing, departure procedures

III

ATC Clearances & Procedures

ATC clearance interpretation, compliance, holding procedures, IFR communications

IV

Flight by Reference to Instruments

Instrument scan techniques, attitude instrument flying, unusual attitude recovery

V

Navigation Systems

VOR, GPS, DME, ADF navigation; RNP and RNAV concepts; system limitations and errors

VI

Instrument Approach Procedures

Precision approaches (ILS, GLS), non-precision approaches (VOR, GPS, NDB), circling, missed approach procedures

VII

Emergency Operations

Partial panel operations, lost communications (91.185), system failures, emergency approaches

How AviaSkill Helps You Pass

The same six powerful study tools, tailored for Instrument Rating preparation.

AI Explanations

AI Explanations

Detailed breakdowns of approach procedures, navigation concepts, and weather theory — with direct links to relevant AIM and PHAK sections

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Smart Study

Smart Study

Focus on your weakest IFR topics — navigation systems, approach procedures, or weather — with AI-optimized sessions

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AI Tutor

AI Tutor

"Walk me through an ILS approach." "What's the difference between LNAV and LPV?" Get instant, detailed answers 24/7

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Backed by FAA Handbooks

Backed by FAA Handbooks

Powered by official FAA publications — so every answer is one you can trust.

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Progress & Readiness

Progress & Readiness

Track mastery across all 7 IFR knowledge areas — see exactly where you need more work before test day

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Exam Simulator

Exam Simulator

Take full-length 60-question practice exams with a 120-minute timer — matching the real IFR exam format

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Know What to Expect on Test Day

Official NameInstrument Rating — Airplane (IRA) Knowledge Test
Test CodeIRA
Questions60 multiple-choice (select one from three options)
Time Limit120 minutes (2 hours)
Passing Score70% (42 correct out of 60)
CalculatorProvided (or approved personal calculator)
Reference MaterialsFAA-approved test supplement provided (includes approach plates, weather charts, navigation charts)
Retake PolicyNo mandatory waiting period — requires additional training and a new instructor endorsement (14 CFR 61.49)
Test Validity24 calendar months (2 years) per 14 CFR 61.39

The IFR knowledge test is administered at the same FAA-authorized testing centers as the PPL exam (PSI or CATS). You'll need an instrument ground instructor or CFII endorsement to schedule. The test supplement includes real approach plates and weather charts — practicing with these materials is essential for exam success.

Study Tip: The IFR exam includes questions that require reading and interpreting approach plates, weather depictions, and instrument charts from the provided test supplement. AviaSkill's practice questions include the same types of chart-based and scenario-based questions you'll see on the real exam.

Your Path to the Instrument Rating

Prerequisites

  • A Private Pilot Certificate (or be concurrently training for one)
  • An endorsement from a CFII or instrument ground instructor
  • 50 hours of cross-country PIC time (14 CFR 61.65)
  • 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time
1

Earn Your Private Pilot Certificate

Complete PPL training and pass both the knowledge test and checkride. Already have your PPL? You're ready for step 2.

2

Begin Instrument Training

Find a CFII (Certified Flight Instructor — Instrument) and start logging instrument flight hours. You'll need at least 40 hours of actual or simulated instrument time.

3

Complete Instrument Ground School

Study instrument procedures, navigation systems, weather theory, and IFR regulations. AviaSkill accelerates this preparation with AI-powered practice.

4

Pass the Knowledge Test

Take the FAA Instrument Rating Knowledge Test at a testing center. 60 questions, 120 minutes, 70% to pass.

AviaSkill Helps Here
5

Pass the Instrument Checkride

Demonstrate instrument flight proficiency to a DPE — including approaches, holding patterns, unusual attitudes, and emergency procedures.

6

Earn Your Instrument Rating

You're now qualified to fly in instrument meteorological conditions. A critical step toward professional aviation careers.

Continue Your Aviation Journey

The Instrument Rating opens doors to advanced certifications and professional aviation.

Commercial Pilot (CPL)

Get paid to fly. Requires PPL, IFR (for airplane), and at least 250 hours total time.

Coming soon

Flight Instructor (CFI)

Teach others to fly and build flight hours. Many pilots earn their CFI while working toward ATP minimums.

Coming soon

CFII (Instrument Instructor)

Teach instrument flying. Requires CFI certificate plus additional instrument training.

Coming soon

ATP & Beyond

Airline Transport Pilot — the highest level of pilot certification. Required for airline operations.

Coming soon

The Instrument Rating is considered the most valuable single rating a pilot can add after the PPL. It's required for most professional aviation careers, improves safety in all weather conditions, and is a prerequisite for the Commercial Pilot Certificate (airplane category).

Tools pilots actually use

Crosswind, METAR, weight & balance — always free, no sign-up needed.

Ready to Pass Your Instrument Rating Written Exam?

Master instrument procedures, navigation systems, and weather theory with AI-powered study tools. All 7 ACS knowledge areas covered. 7-day free trial — no credit card required.