
Category: EASA / International Regulatory Update
Title: N-Registered Aircraft in Europe – Licensing Clarification
Date of Issue: April 2026
Applicability: Private Operators and Pilots of N-Registered Aircraft in Europe
Summary of Change
A recent publication by the German Ministry of Transport (NFL 2026-1-3812) draws attention to the operation of N-registered aircraft within EU Member States.
The publication highlights how the FAA regulation 14 CFR §61.3(a)(1)(vii) is to be read in practice:
- A (non-FAA) pilot licence may only be used in the country by which it was issued.
For EASA Part-FCL licences, this leads to a structural implication:
- Although licences are recognised across the EU, they remain issued by individual Member States.
This creates a potential limitation when operating N-registered aircraft across borders within Europe.
Operational Impact
For pilots operating N-registered aircraft:
- An EASA Part-FCL licence is formally linked to
- the issuing Member State
- Cross-border operations within the EU
- are not explicitly covered by the FAA wording
- As a result
- legal interpretation may vary depending on the case
This primarily affects:
- private / non-commercial operations
- pilots operating under EASA licences only
TRS Recommendation
From an operational perspective:
- The decisive factor is
- which licence is used for the flight
Current practical approach:
- EASA Part-FCL only
- according to FAA wording flights only allowed within issuing country
- FAA licence (private operations)
- fully aligned with the N-reg regulatory framework
- operationally robust
Operators and pilots should:
- be aware of this structural limitation
- avoid assumptions of automatic EU-wide applicability
Official Source
German Ministry of Transport – NFL 2026-1-3812
FAA – 14 CFR §61.3(a)(1)(vii)