EASA 90-Day Passenger Currency Tracker
Log takeoffs and landings and see instantly whether you may carry passengers under EASA recency rules — and the exact date currency lapses.
Rule applied: FCL.060(b)(1) — three takeoffs, approaches and landings in the preceding 90 days in an aircraft of the same type or class (or a qualifying FFS).
No entries yet — add your first one above. Data stays in your browser.
⚠️ Not for operational decisions. This is a record-keeping and planning aid only — not certified avionics, not a source of regulatory truth. Always verify against official sources (EASA) and your operator's approved documents before flying.
Disclaimer: This tool is for general informational and estimation purposes only and is not professional financial, tax, accounting or legal advice. All figures are estimates — verify with a qualified professional before making decisions. Read the full disclaimer.
Free EASA 90-day currency tracker: log your takeoffs and landings and the tool tells you if you're legal to carry passengers — plus the exact date your currency expires.
About EASA 90-Day Passenger Currency Tracker
Under EASA rules — FCL.060(b)(1) — three takeoffs, approaches and landings in the preceding 90 days in an aircraft of the same type or class (or a qualifying FFS) — your right to carry passengers depends on a rolling 90-day count that shifts every midnight. This tool does that arithmetic continuously: each logged session contributes its landings to the window, the status flips between CURRENT and NOT CURRENT automatically, and you always see the exact calendar date currency lapses so you can book proficiency flying before it does, not after.
How to use EASA 90-Day Passenger Currency Tracker
- 1Log each session with its takeoffs and landings.
- 2Read the status tile: CURRENT until a date, or the landings you still need.
- 3Schedule refresher circuits before the shown expiry date arrives.
Why use EASA 90-Day Passenger Currency Tracker?
- ✓Implements the actual rule: three takeoffs, approaches and landings in the preceding 90 days in an aircraft of the same type or class (or a qualifying FFS)
- ✓Shows CURRENT / NOT CURRENT plus the exact lapse date
- ✓Counts landings per session — log three landings as one entry
- ✓Rolling 90-day window recomputed live every time you open it
- ✓Private browser-only storage with CSV export
Frequently asked questions
Do my landings have to be in the same aircraft type?+
They must match in category and class — and in type when a type rating is required. FCL.060(b)(1) — three takeoffs, approaches and landings in the preceding 90 days in an aircraft of the same type or class (or a qualifying FFS). Landings in a single-engine land aeroplane refresh currency for that class only, so keep separate logs (or clearly typed entries) if you fly multiple classes and want each window visible.
Where does the lapse date on the status tile come from?+
From the rolling-window arithmetic itself: your currency survives exactly as long as three qualifying landings remain inside the trailing 90 days, so the lapse date is your third-newest landing's date plus the window. Add a fresh session and the date jumps forward; delete one and it recedes — always recomputed, never estimated.
How do I regain currency once it lapses?+
Fly the missing takeoffs and landings without passengers — solo, or with an appropriately qualified instructor depending on your regulator's reading — and log each one here. The status recalculates immediately, so you'll watch yourself go CURRENT in real time, with a fresh expiry date 90 days beyond the landing that completed the set.
Do I need an account or internet connection?+
No account and no connection are needed once the page has loaded — all records are kept in local storage on your device and all calculations run in your browser. The trade-off is that data does not sync between devices, so export the CSV file when you want to move or archive your records.
How do I back up or print these records?+
Use the Export CSV button below the table: it downloads your full currency record as a spreadsheet-ready file. From there you can print a clean copy, archive it with your training folder, or import it into any electronic logbook program. Exporting monthly is a good habit since the working data lives only in your browser.
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