IndiGo plans to hire over 1,000 pilots after December’s crew crunch

IndiGo plans to hire over 1,000 pilots after December's crew crunch

IndiGo, the country’s largest airline is set to go on a hiring spree, bringing over 1,000 pilots on board. This comes after the aviation giant faced massive operational disruption last December, when the company was forced to cancel more than 5,000 flights within seven days.The fresh intake will span trainee first officers, senior first officers and commanders. A recruitment notice shows the carrier is also ready to accept applicants without time on the Airbus A320, the workhorse aircraft across its network, ET reported.Under the updated framework, the number of landings permitted between 12 am and 6 am has been limited, while the mandatory weekly rest period for pilots has gone up.A review carried out by the irectorate General of Civil Aviation concluded that the airline had neither hired in line with the new rules nor accelerated its training capacity. This, the probe noted, resulted in pilots being stretched through repeated reassignments, lengthier duty spans and greater use of deadheading, in which crew are moved as passengers to operate flights elsewhere.

Stepping up expansion

A senior official, as cited by ET, maintained that IndiGo is now lining up a steady supply of cockpit crew to keep pace with rapid aircraft additions. The airline’s in-house system is currently upgrading about 20–25 first officers to captain each month. Now, alongside hiring, the carrier has begun adjusting its network planning to create more breathing space in daily operations. From almost no buffer in December, the margin has been raised to 3% this month. Standby crew availability has also been lifted to a minimum of 15%.Fleet expansion is continuing at a brisk rate, with roughly four aircraft joining the airline every month on average.Training remains a long lead activity. Trainee first officers require around six months before they are cleared to operate, while promotion to captaincy demands at least 1,500 hours of flying, though airlines may prescribe stricter benchmarks.While the regulator’s baseline requirement is three sets of pilots per aircraft, including one captain and one first officer, IndiGo’s intense utilisation levels push its need to well over twice that figure.Figures placed during the inquiry into the December episode showed the airline needed 2,422 captains but had 2,357.

DGCA findings

After the disruption, the watchdog stepped in with temporary relaxations, suspending night-duty restriction rules until February 10.In its assessment, the DGCA said there was an overriding focus on maximising utilisation of crew, aircraft, and network resources, which significantly reduced roster buffer margins.The Directorate General of Civil Aviation said that the airline structured its crew schedules to extract the longest possible duty hours, leaning heavily on deadheading, tail swaps and stretched work patterns while leaving very little room for recovery. It noted that such planning weakened roster integrity and hurt operational resilience.

  • Related Posts

    Arresting rupee’s fall: India eyes cut in taxes on bond investments by foreigners – here’s how it may help

    The proposal was suggested by the Reserve Bank of India and is currently under active consideration by the Finance Ministry. Looking to tackle foreign outflows and preserve forex, the government…

    Strait of Hormuz crisis a wake up call! India eyes Rs 40,000 crore subsea pipeline for uninterrupted gas supplies from Gulf

    India’s demand for natural gas has been climbing steadily as the country seeks to raise the share of gas in its overall energy basket. (AI image) As concerns surrounding the…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Hundreds of ChatGPT developers become overnight millionaires but why they may need to thank Mark Zuckerberg for this and not CEO Sam Altman

    Hundreds of ChatGPT developers become overnight millionaires but why they may need to thank Mark Zuckerberg for this and not CEO Sam Altman

    ‘Mera Lyari’: Pakistan’s answer to Ranveer Singh’s ‘Dhurandhar’ sells only 22 tickets on opening day, pulled from theatres | Hindi Movie News

    ‘Mera Lyari’: Pakistan’s answer to Ranveer Singh’s ‘Dhurandhar’ sells only 22 tickets on opening day, pulled from theatres | Hindi Movie News

    Surya Midha: Meet Surya Midha: The 22-year-old college dropout AI founder who became a billionaire faster than Mark Zuckerberg | World News

    Surya Midha: Meet Surya Midha: The 22-year-old college dropout AI founder who became a billionaire faster than Mark Zuckerberg | World News

    Arresting rupee’s fall: India eyes cut in taxes on bond investments by foreigners – here’s how it may help

    Arresting rupee’s fall: India eyes cut in taxes on bond investments by foreigners – here’s how it may help

    BITSAT 2026 slot booking live for Session 2: Check direct link, how to apply and last date of application

    BITSAT 2026 slot booking live for Session 2: Check direct link, how to apply and last date of application

    Robin Williams: What happened to Robin William’s estate after his passing? When Susan Robins settled with his children |

    Robin Williams: What happened to Robin William’s estate after his passing? When Susan Robins settled with his children |