Puerto Rico Aviation Maintenance Institute

Puerto Rico Aviation Maintenance Institute

Puerto Rico Aviation Maintenance Institute

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Details

Program Length in Months: 36 Months
Approximate Program Cost: Not listed
GI Bill Approved: Not Listed
Ratings Offered: Airframe & Powerplant
Credential Type: Certificate
Pets Allowed: Yes
Class Schedule: Unknown
Housing: Not Listed
Approximate Total Clock Hours: 2252
College or Private School: Private School
Industry Partners: None Listed
Quebrada Vueltas, Carr #3 Marginal, Km 49.5, Fajardo, PR 00738

Description

Puerto Rico Aviation Maintenance Institute (PRAMI) is a postsecondary aviation maintenance school operated through Puerto Rico’s Department of Education and located in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. PRAMI’s Aircraft Maintenance Technology training is structured to meet the requirements of FAA Part 147, making it a rare option for students in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean who want an FAA-approved pathway toward mechanic certification. The program is designed around the three core curriculums that align with the FAA testing framework: General, Airframe, and Powerplant. Students progress through the academic sequence with a mix of classroom instruction and hands-on projects intended to build the practical skills required in real maintenance environments.

PRAMI emphasizes the fundamentals of aircraft technology and maintenance documentation, then expands into airframe systems and powerplant systems so graduates can pursue Airframe and Powerplant privileges. According to the school’s published program overview, the combined General, Airframe, and Powerplant curriculums total about 2,252 hours and are planned across approximately three Puerto Rico Department of Education school-calendar years. That structure is important for students comparing programs, because it signals a long-form, comprehensive training experience rather than a short accelerated schedule. PRAMI also notes that it issues certificates as students complete each curriculum (General, Powerplant, and Airframe), which can help students and employers understand training milestones.

Because the school operates within a public education framework, PRAMI’s mission and messaging lean heavily into workforce development: building competencies, technical abilities, and professional ethics that translate into employability. The school describes its purpose as preparing individuals to be productive contributors and effective leaders in the aviation industry, with a focus on meeting modern industry technology and requirements. Students should expect training that prioritizes safety culture, precision work habits, and compliance with regulated processes core expectations for any maintenance technician working under FAA rules.

For prospective students, PRAMI is most compelling for three reasons. First, location: for residents of Puerto Rico who want FAA-aligned maintenance training without relocating to the mainland U.S., PRAMI offers a local route. Second, scope: the curriculum is built to cover General, Airframe, and Powerplant outcomes rather than limiting students to a single rating. Third, legitimacy: the program is explicitly positioned as FAA-approved and built to comply with Part 147 practical project requirements, which is the backbone of eligibility for the written, oral, and practical testing path. Students considering PRAMI should plan for a multi-year commitment, ask about current start dates and daily schedules, and confirm any additional costs (tools, testing fees, uniforms, etc.) directly with admissions.

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