Aviation Institute of Maintenance – Orlando

Aviation Institute of Maintenance - Orlando

Aviation Institute of Maintenance – Orlando

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Details

Program Length in Months: 21 Months
Approximate Program Cost: $47410 (Est. Program)
GI Bill Approved: Yes
Ratings Offered: Airframe & Powerplant
Credential Type: Certificate
Pets Allowed: Yes
Class Schedule: Day
Housing: Not Listed
Approximate Total Clock Hours: 2040
College or Private School: Private School
Industry Partners: American; United; Delta; Piedmont
2725 S US Highway 17/92, Casselberry, FL 32707

Description

The Aviation Institute of Maintenance (AIM) Orlando Metro campus in Casselberry, Florida offers an Aviation Maintenance Technician program built to prepare students for FAA Airframe & Powerplant certification and entry-level employment in aircraft maintenance. As a career-focused trade program, AIM emphasizes practical skill-building: learning the maintenance standards, practicing procedures in a shop environment, and gaining familiarity with the tools, documentation, and workflows that aviation employers expect. AIM’s AMT program is commonly marketed as a roughly 21-month pathway, which makes it a competitive option for students who want a predictable timeline from enrollment to completion. Students can expect a cohort-style training environment where progress is driven by structured coursework and hands-on lab activities. In general, programs like this move through the FAA-required subjects, typically starting with General and then building into Airframe and Powerplant competencies. Because aviation maintenance is a safety-critical profession, a key part of training is learning how to work methodically. Students practice inspection and troubleshooting approaches, learn how to interpret technical publications and approved data, and develop habits around documenting work correctly. In the lab setting, the goal is to translate classroom concepts into repeatable performance-using proper torque techniques, selecting hardware correctly, applying safety procedures, and understanding how aircraft systems interact. From a career perspective, Orlando’s broader region supports a range of aviation activity-general aviation, business aviation, and access to regional airline and MRO ecosystems in Florida. Schools that train AMTs often supplement technical training with career services, such as interview prep, resume support, and connections to employers. If you’re selecting a campus-based program, it’s worth asking specifically about hiring relationships in the Orlando/Central Florida area and what roles graduates most commonly enter (line maintenance, hangar maintenance, avionics-adjacent work, etc.). When evaluating AIM Orlando Metro, confirm total program costs (tuition plus fees, books, tools), as well as whether financial aid and veterans benefits are available. Also ask about daily class times, attendance requirements, and any flexibility if you’re balancing work or family. These details help ensure the 21-month timeline matches your real-world schedule and that you’re prepared for the intensity of the training. If you are comparing A&P options, a practical way to evaluate fit is to confirm the FAA Part 147 approval status, ask how the curriculum is sequenced (General, Airframe, Powerplant), and request a calendar showing start dates and daily class times. You can also ask whether the school helps schedule FAA written, oral, and practical testing after each phase, what tools or uniforms are required, and what employers typically recruit from recent graduating cohorts. Finally, confirm total estimated costs (tuition, fees, books, tools) and whether financial aid, scholarships, veteran benefits, or payment plans are available for your situation. These details make it much easier to compare programs apples-to-apples and choose the path that matches your timeline, budget, and long-term career goals.

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