For three days in Aventura, the leaders shaping North American flight training sat in the same room to talk about where the industry is going next: new regulations, airline partnerships, AI in flight training, VA funding, and a lot more. AZA was there as a sponsor, and as host of a special moment back at our North Perry base. Here's what was discussed, and why it matters for every AZA student.

JW Marriott Turnberry, Aventura, FL • May 20-22, 2026
AeroSummit is not an air show. No Thunderbirds, no food trucks on the ramp, no crowds watching demos. It is something different and for your career, arguably more important: this is where flight schools, CFIs, airlines, regulators, and suppliers sit down together and decide where the next decade of pilot training is headed.
This year, AZA was proud to be a sponsor.
Why AZA Showed Up
Our commitment to every student goes beyond hours in the cockpit. It is about understanding where the industry is moving, what opportunities are opening up, and how we can better prepare the next generation of pilots. AeroSummit is exactly that kind of space. Three days of high-level keynotes, panels with leaders who actually make the calls, and hallway conversations that often beat the official agenda.
The Five Themes That Owned the Room
If we had to boil AeroSummit 2026 down to five headlines, these would be them:
- MOSAIC is changing the game. The FAA's new MOSAIC rule is redefining what counts as a Light Sport Aircraft and how you train in one. For students, that means more aircraft options, potentially lower costs, and new pathways to the hours you need.
- Part 141 is modernizing. Jeff Wolf (NFTA) led a critical conversation on how Part 141 schools need to adapt their programs to today's regulatory landscape. Schools that stay static get left behind.
- AI hit flight training, and it's not going away. From flight data analysis to curriculum optimization, AI is making its way into ground school and the cockpit. The schools that integrate it well can lower costs without giving up quality.
- Airlines are building direct pathways. Brian Chevlin (United Aviate Academy), Terry Basham (GoJet), and Brian diLorenzo (Piedmont) talked about how airlines are signing partnerships with schools to fast-track students into professional cockpits.
- The mental game matters as much as the maneuvers. Tammy Barlette (Crosscheck Mental Performance), a retired USAF A-10 pilot, reminded the room of something easy to forget: your head flies the airplane before your hands do. Mental training has gone from "nice to have" to non-negotiable.
The Keynote That Closed the Show

Stephanie Goetz, better known online as JetGirlStephanie, closed AeroSummit with a keynote on career, purpose, and how to build a real life in aviation. Bombardier Global 6000 corporate pilot, airshow pilot in a pink L-39 Albatros, NBAA Top 40 Under 40, her story is exactly the kind of inspiration the next generation of pilots needs to hear.
The North Perry Moment
One of the moments we were most proud of this event was hosting industry colleagues at our North Perry (KHWO) base for a special gathering. Walking the ramp, showing off our aircraft, introducing the team, and breaking bread with leaders from all over the country, that is not networking, that is real community in action.
For AZA, opening the gates at KHWO was not just hospitality. It was a statement: we want the industry to know who we are, how we train, and the environment our students step into every day.
Why This Matters for AZA Students
You might be thinking, "If I'm a student, why do I care about a summit full of school owners and executives?"
Here is why:
- The regulations being discussed in that room directly affect your checkrides (MOSAIC, Part 141).
- The airline partnerships being signed there are the ones that open doors the day after your CFI ticket.
- The curriculum innovations introduced there show up in your ground school six months later.
- The people who were in that room are chief pilots, program directors, and DPEs. When AZA shows up in those spaces, your network as a student grows — even when you are not in the room yourself.
That is the real value of training at a school that sits at the table where decisions get made.
What's Next
AeroSummit 2026 confirmed something we already knew: flight training is moving fast, and the schools that serve their students best are the ones that stay ahead of the change.
We remain committed to building spaces that inspire, connect, and push all of us to keep growing. Kaizen - small, continuous improvements. That is the philosophy we train by, and it is exactly why we showed up at AeroSummit.
See you on the ramp.

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