Aviation social network
Aviation social network: what pilots need beyond generic social media
Pilots already share flying stories, airport tips, aircraft questions, and club updates online. The problem is fragmentation. Pilot Social is testing whether a focused aviation social network can make those conversations more useful.
Why a dedicated aviation network can work
Generic social networks are optimized for broad attention. Aviation communities need a different structure: aircraft context, airport relevance, training questions, club workflows, weather awareness, and trust between people who actually fly or work around aviation.
What Pilot Social wants to learn from the first 1000 users
The first users should help answer which community features matter most: public flight posts, private messages, club pages, marketplace listings, profile signals, or better connections between logbook entries and community stories.
How to help
Join early access, try one community workflow, leave feedback, and invite one pilot, student, instructor, or club member who would give a different perspective.
Join the aviation community test
Pilot Social is looking for the first 1000 global aviation users who want to shape the network before it scales.
Join free early access