FLYING LESSONS for July 31, 2025

Topics this week include: >> MOSAIC Final Rule >>Legacy and LSA. >>Sport Pilot privileges

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FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances.  In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. So apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.  Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence.  You are pilot in command and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.     

FLYING LESSONS is an independent product of MASTERY FLIGHT TRAINING, INC.

This week’s LESSONS:

I’m fresh back from Oshkosh—well, maybe not quite so fresh—so let’s hit a couple items before we get back to our usual format next week.

FLYING LESSONS reader and long-time friend Max Trescott received a listener comment to his Aviation News Talk program a few weeks back. The listener is a sailplane pilot wanting to begin training to earn Airplane privileges. He is evaluating three options for his powered aircraft training, one of which is buying a Beech Bonanza as his training airplane. The other choices are a school with traditional training airplanes and another well-known provider using cool new-ish Light Sport designs. Max invited me to join this interview with the listener in which the three of us discuss the pros and cons of each option and how they might best fit the pilot’s training goals.  

With apologies to my international readers for whom this package of new regulations does not apply…

The Final Rule for the Modernization of Special Airworthiness Aircraft Certification (MOSAIC), announced at Oshkosh, is a massive redesign of Light Sport Aircraft (LSA) certification that also has provisions for expanding the types of aircraft that may be flown by a Sport Pilot. There are also a number of miscellaneous provisions that is each of great importance to the segment of the industry it concerns. MOSAIC is the result of many years of negotiation and data evaluation by aircraft manufacturers; advocacy associations like the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA), the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) and others; and regulators (FAA). A Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for MOSAIC was published in 2023 and hundreds of public comments were received from organizations and individuals. 

FAA answered the comments and they are addressed in the Final Rule document published on the Federal Register on July 24, 2025. Changes to Sport Pilot privileges go into effect October 22, 2025, 90 days after the Rule’s effective date. The remaining provisions of MOSAIC become law July 24, 2026, one year after the publication date.

FAA states in the preamble to the Final Rule that its primary motivation for considering and eventually codifying MOSAIC was concern for the higher accident rate of Experimental/Amateur-Built (E/AB) aircraft compared to that of certificated designs, and to promote design and capability of new LSA types to make production aircraft more capable and perhaps more attractive to pilots and aircraft owners than E/ABs. The Final Rule states, with emphasis added:

MOSAIC’s Final Rule consists of three distinct results:

  1. Redefinition of Light Sport Aircraft certification (as currently, through industry-based ASTM consensus standards) of new production aircraft, increasing performance and equipment to meet FAA’s goal of more capable small aircraft;
  2. Expansion of the types of aircraft that may be operated by pilots under Sport Pilot rules, including many legacy certificated aircraft; and
  3. Adding to the approved uses of certain Special Category aircraft. 

There are several additional provisions for Light Sport repairman certificates and other items related to Light Sport aircraft and Sport Pilots.

MOSAIC does not permit redesignating a legacy certificated aircraft as an LSA and thereby loosening its maintenance, modification and inspection requirements. Included in the MOSAIC Final Rule is an amendment to 14 CFR 22 that states:

Legacy airplanes like a Cessna 172, a Piper Arrow or a Beech Bonanza are certificated in the Standard category (including Normal, Utility, Aerobatic) so they may not be recertified as LSA. Other provisions for relaxed maintenance and parts certification requirements for Standard category personal aircraft that had been discussed in the years leading up to MOSAIC did not make it into the Final Rule. Nothing in MOSAIC changes the maintenance, modification or inspection requirements of a type certificated aircraft. As its full name implies, the Modernization of Special Aircraft Certification is primarily concerned with permitting newly designed Light Sport Aircraft to be put into production with a significant reduction in regulatory requirements and with additional performance that makes them more attractive compared to other options.

Perhaps the most publicly anticipated provision of the new regulatory package, MOSAIC’s amendments to Part 61 of the Federal Air Regulations make a big change to a large number of legacy type certificated aircraft: they may be flown by a Sport Pilot. Sport Pilots are not required to hold an FAA medical certificate or participate in BasicMed. If the pilot has a current U.S. state-issued driver’s license they may operate as pilot-in-command of aircraft meeting certain requirements without any additional medical screening. They must adhere to any limitations and restrictions that apply to that driver’s license (“must wear corrective lenses,” “not valid at night,” etc.) and “any judicial or administrative order applying to the operation of a motor vehicle” (suspensions, revocations, etc.).

A pilot who holds a Recreational or higher pilot certificate may upon the effective date of the new rule exercise the privileges of a Sport Pilot using this so-called “driver’s license medical.” There are, of course, some caveats. 

Flying as a Sport Pilot is not an option if you’ve failed your last medical or have had an application for a Special Issuance medical withdrawn. It is not an option if your most recent medical certificate was suspended or revoked. Self-certification before all flights still applies: you cannot know or be expected to know of a condition that impacts safety of flight. This includes medications, fatigue, ear infections, etc. It also includes this from the FAA website:

Other conditions not specifically listed in the regulations are also disqualifying. For further information refer to the Guide for Aviation Medical Examiners (www.faa.gov/ame_guide).

“Adequately controlling” one of these conditions, which with an FAA medical would require a Special Issuance, is open to interpretation for the Sport Pilot. For your own safety and that that of your passenger (Sport Pilot limits you to only one passenger), get your doctor’s or an Aviation Medical Examiner’s advice before flying while being treated for any disqualifying conditions. 

Sport Pilot privileges edited for applicability to airplanes:

The MOSAIC Final Rule introduces some confusion related to stall speed. It permits new LSAs to have a landing configuration stall speed (VS0) as high as 61 knots calibrated airspeed, the same as type certificated single-engine aircraft. There is no limit on flaps up stall speed (VS1) for new LSAs. But Sport Pilots are limited to flying aircraft with no more than a 59 KCAS VS1 regardless of that aircraft’s VS0.

MOSAIC also has not changed these operational limits on Sport Pilots (§61.316): 

  • Day VFR conditions (night privileges may be added by endorsement);
  • 10,000 feet MSL or lower or 2000 feet AGL, whichever is higher;
  • No operation when the flight or surface visibility is less than three statute miles (no “one mile and clear of clouds” in Class G airspace; no Special VFR in class D if visibility is the limiting factor); 
  • No operation without visual reference to the surface (no flight above a solid undercast).
  • No more than two persons aboard the aircraft including the pilot (even though four-seat airplanes are approved). 

High performance and complex airplane privileges for Sport Pilots may now be added by endorsement under MOSAIC.  

Better minds than mine will pore over the minutia of the Final Rule and interpret and explain its provisions. Pilots, Aviation Maintenance Technicians and flight instructors may have to change their way of doing things when the Sport Pilot privileges and the remaining provisions become law upon their effective dates. 

EAA is hosting a webinar August 7 at 7 pm U.S. Central time (0000Z 8 AUG) “to explain this monumental rule change that delivers Sport Pilot 2.0.” I’ve registered to attend; perhaps you should too.

Questions? Comments? Supportable opinions? Let us know at [email protected]

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Thanks also to these donors in 2025:

Thomas P. Turner, M.S. Aviation Safety 

Flight Instructor Hall of Fame Inductee

2021 Jack Eggspuehler Service Award winner

2010 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year 

2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the Year

FLYING LESSONS is ©2025 Mastery Flight Training, Inc.  For more information see www.thomaspturner.com. For reprint permission or other questions contact [email protected].  

Disclaimer

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances. In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. Apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.

Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence. You are pilot in command, and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.