ROTC Flight Training Scholarships
If you’re an Air Force ROTC cadet with a flight training scholarship, we can help you turn that funding into real flight hours, strong skills, and a more competitive Air Force application.
Aces High Aviation is approved to work with ROTC flight scholarships and is listed as an eligible school for using those funds toward your training. We’ve worked with many ROTC cadets over the years and understand how to maximize your scholarship hours and keep your training aligned with program requirements.
How ROTC Flight Scholarships Work With Aces High
Every ROTC scholarship has its own rules and limits, but they generally cover a set amount of funding to be used toward flight training within a specific time frame.
At Aces High, we:
Coordinate directly with you and your detachment so your training plan matches scholarship guidelines.
Plan your lessons around your budget, making sure every hour counts toward real progress (solo, cross-country, checkride prep, etc.).
Help with documentation and tracking, including detailed invoices and training records as needed by your unit.
Keep your training on timeline, so you don’t leave funded hours unused.
Our goal is to make the scholarship simple to use while keeping you moving efficiently toward your checkride.
Maximizing Points for Your Air Force Application
Flight time and real-world experience can be a big plus when you’re building your Air Force package.
While we can’t control how the Air Force scores your packet, we can help you:
Build meaningful, loggable hours in a structured training program.
Reach key milestones (solo, cross-country, checkride) that look strong in your record.
Develop solid airmanship, decision-making, and professionalism that carries over into your military career.
Present clean, organized training documentation that reflects well on you and your detachment.
We’ve worked with a large number of ROTC cadets over the years, so we know what typically helps you get the most value and the most impact out of your scholarship.
Why ROTC Cadets Train at Aces High Aviation
ROTC cadets choose Aces High because we:
Are approved to accept ROTC scholarship funds for flight training
Have extensive experience with ROTC students and scholarship paperwork
Understand your cadet schedule, PT, classes, and summer training commitments
Offer a busy training environment with lots of aircraft and instructor availability
Focus on safety, professionalism, and real-world skills, not just “hours in the logbook”
We treat your scholarship like an investment in your future Air Force career, not just a way to burn hours.
Q: Can I use my Air Force ROTC scholarship for flight training?
A: Yes. Aces High Aviation is approved to accept ROTC flight scholarships for flight lessons and structured training programs.
Q: How many flight hours can I get with an ROTC scholarship?
A: It varies by detachment and scholarship type, but we help you maximize every funded hour so you complete key milestones efficiently.
Q: Will flight time help my Air Force pilot application?
A: Yes. Flight time and documented training progress typically strengthen your application and overall competitiveness.
Q: Do you work directly with ROTC detachments?
A: Yes. We coordinate training records, documentation, and schedules to meet scholarship requirements.
Q: Can I finish solo or get my Private Pilot certificate with ROTC funds?
A: Many cadets reach major milestones during their scholarship period. Progress depends on scholarship hours and training frequency.
How to Get Started
If you already have an ROTC flight scholarship or expect to receive one soon:
Contact us with your detachment’s scholarship details via (562) 726-3719 or email admin@aceshighaviation.com
We’ll review your requirements and build a training plan that fits your budget and timeline.
We’ll help you get on the schedule quickly so you can start flying and making progress right away.
Ready to use your ROTC scholarship for flight training?
Get in touch with us and let’s map out a plan that maximizes your hours and strengthens your path to an Air Force cockpit.