About SkyStudy
SkyStudy is an independent EASA ATPL study platform built to do one thing well: help pilots retain a very large theoretical syllabus and walk into each exam knowing what they actually understand.
Why we built it
ATPL theory spans 14 subjects that have to stay alive in memory across a long training arc. Most question banks score you and stop there. SkyStudy was built around the parts that actually move a result: spaced repetition so older subjects do not decay, weak-area tracking so revision time goes where it is needed, and timed mock exams so accuracy survives under pressure. Everything in the product exists to support retention and honest self-assessment rather than raw question count.
How we write and source our content
SkyStudy practice questions and explanations are original content written for this platform. We map every item to the official EASA ATPL(A) subject and learning-objective structure so practice lines up with the real syllabus, and we are transparent about which material is SkyStudy-owned and which references official sources.
- Questions are structured around the published EASA ATPL(A) subject framework and learning objectives.
- Explanations are written to teach the underlying principle, not just to confirm the correct letter.
- We do not present SkyStudy as affiliated with or endorsed by any aviation authority or training organisation.
For the full attribution and no-endorsement notice, see our official sources page.
Our study methodology
The platform combines four connected systems rather than four separate tools:
- Practice exposes what you know, half-know, and have not yet learned, and feeds data into everything else.
- Spaced repetition schedules reviews so retention is protected as the syllabus grows.
- Weak-area tracking turns your results into a ranked list of what to revise next.
- Timed mock exams rehearse pacing and pressure, then feed weak topics back into the cycle.
You can read more about how this fits together on our ATPL study plan and question bank pages.
Who is behind SkyStudy
SkyStudy is built by an EASA ATPL pilot who went through the theory the hard way and came out the other side fast: ATPL ground school completed in under 16 months, finishing with an average of around 90% across the fourteen subjects, and now flying.
The platform grew directly out of that experience. Working through the commercial question banks during training, the same gap kept showing up: they tested you, but they did not help you retain a syllabus this large or find your weak spots before exam day. So SkyStudy became the tool that was missing: spaced repetition to keep older subjects alive, a structured study plan, weak-area tracking that tells you exactly what to revise next, a fast question search, and the other features the commercial apps left out.
Every part of it comes from sitting the same exams you are preparing for. If something here helps you walk into a paper more confident, that is the whole point.
Have a correction, a question about a learning objective, or feedback on the platform? Email us at to2000bv@gmail.com. We genuinely use it to improve the content.
A beta product, shaped by your feedback
SkyStudy is in active beta. It already covers the full syllabus and the core study loop, and it is still growing: more features are on the way, and several of them will come straight from what users ask for. If a tool, a view, or a workflow would make your study environment better, tell us. That feedback genuinely steers what gets built next.
You can send feedback straight from the feedback form inside the app, or email us at to2000bv@gmail.com. All feedback is welcome, and a better platform for you is exactly the point.
Independence and transparency
SkyStudy is an independent study aid. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, approved by, or certified by EASA, any National Aviation Authority, or any Approved Training Organisation. Always confirm requirements with your ATO and the current official syllabus before your exams.
Start studying
Try the question bank and see how the retention loop works in practice.