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Commercial Pilot Rotorcraft Helicopter — ACS Reference

The Commercial Pilot Rotorcraft Helicopter Airman Certification Standards are the official task-by-task standards for the CPL helicopter practical test. Published November 2023, the FAA replaced the legacy Commercial Helicopter PTS (FAA-S-8081-16B) with FAA-S-ACS-16 — Commercial Pilot for Rotorcraft Category Helicopter Rating ACS. This page is a structured navigation map — every Task below shows its code, title, page reference, objective, primary references, and a link to the relevant RotaryXC content. For the verbatim K/RM/S element list, always read the live ACS PDF — that is the source of truth and the document the DPE has open at your practical test.

Source: FAA-S-ACS-16 (current ACS, November 2023); 14 CFR § 61.127(b); FAA-H-8083-21B Helicopter Flying Handbook.

What's different from PPL ACS: Adds Night Operations as Task I.I (preflight planning depth); reorganizes Confined Area + Pinnacle into a separate Area IX. Special Operations; adds basic instrument competency in Area VIII (Tasks L & M — Flight by Reference to Instruments and Recovery from Unusual Attitudes). All other Areas mirror the PPL ACS structure with commercial-level standards.

How to read an ACS code

Every test element is a four-part code. CH.I.C.K2 means:

Sub-elements use lowercase letters (e.g., CH.I.B.K3a). The Airman Knowledge Test Report (AKTR) reports missed questions as ACS codes.

Commercial Pilot Helicopter (CRH) knowledge test

Per 14 CFR § 61.39, the knowledge test must be passed before the practical. An applicant adding the helicopter category to an existing certificate complies with § 61.63.

Reference library

Documents cited across the Tasks below. All FAA materials are public domain.

Area I.Preflight Preparation

CH.I.A · Pilot Qualifications p.2

Commercial pilot certificate privileges/limitations, currency, recordkeeping, and medical certificate requirements (commercial requires at least second-class for compensation/hire ops).

Refs: 14 CFR Parts 61, 68, 91; AC 68-1; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.I.B · Airworthiness Requirements p.2

General airworthiness, ADs, MEL/KOEL, owner/operator responsibilities, and pilot-performed preventive maintenance — at commercial-operations depth.

Refs: 14 CFR Parts 27, 29, 39, 43, 91; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.I.C · Weather Information p.3

Weather products, meteorology, and go/no-go decision making at commercial-operations depth — multiplied exposure across more flights and routes.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AC 91-92; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25, -28

CH.I.D · Cross-Country Flight Planning p.4

Route planning, altitude selection, performance calc, fuel reserves, VFR flight plan, intercept procedures, EFB use — for commercial XC operations.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AC 91-21-1; AIM; Chart Supplements; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; Helicopter Route Charts; NOTAMs; VFR Navigation Charts

CH.I.E · National Airspace System p.5

Airspace classes and requirements, special-use airspace, SFRA, TFR, special VFR — at the level needed to operate commercially in any class of airspace.

Refs: 14 CFR Parts 71, 91, 93; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; Helicopter Route Charts; VFR Navigation Charts

CH.I.F · Performance and Limitations p.6

Performance charts/tables, atmospheric and configuration effects, W&B math, H/V diagram, RBS and LTE limits — applied to commercial-load operations.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-1, -2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.I.G · Operation of Systems p.7

Helicopter systems: flight controls/trim, powerplant, rotor and antitorque, transmission, fuel/oil/hydraulic, avionics, electrical, instruments, environmental, anti-/de-ice. Indications and procedures for system abnormalities.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.I.H · Human Factors p.8

Aeromedical and physiological issues, fitness, regulations on alcohol/drugs, ADM with CRM/SRM, hazardous attitudes — at commercial-operations level.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.I.I · Night Operations p.9NEW vs PPL

Night-flight planning, vision physiology, equipment per § 91.205(c), lighting systems, night orientation, illusions, currency vs proficiency. (PPL placed Night Ops in its own Area IX; CPL collapses it into Preflight Preparation.)

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area II.Preflight Procedures

CH.II.A · Preflight Assessment p.10

Pilot self-assessment; helicopter airworthiness determination; preflight inspection items, defect detection, regulations; environmental factors.

Refs: AC 91-32; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.II.B · Flight Deck Management p.10

Passenger briefing (commercial-pax considerations), checklists, current navigation data, cargo securing, SRM/CRM application.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.II.C · Powerplant Starting and Rotor Engagement p.11

Starting under various conditions, with/without external power; aborted-start conditions; positioning the helicopter for safe engagement.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.II.D · Before Takeoff Check p.12

Purpose of checklist items, malfunction detection, manufacturer-recommended configuration; takeoff and emergency review.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area III.Airport and Heliport Operations

CH.III.A · Runway/Taxiway/Heliport/Helipad Signs, Markings, and Lighting p.13

Sign/marking/lighting interpretation; landing site dimensions and limitations; runway incursion and conflict avoidance.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.III.B · Communications, Light Signals, and Runway Lighting Systems p.13

Frequencies, ATC phraseology, light signals, transponder use, lost-comm procedures, NTSB reporting, runway status lighting.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.III.C · Traffic Patterns p.14

Towered and nontowered ops; pattern altitudes (±100 ft) and airspeed (±10 kt); fixed-wing flow avoidance per § 91.126(b)(2).

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

Area IV.Hovering Maneuvers

Note: Task D must be tested in addition if the applicant supplies a wheel-type helicopter.

CH.IV.A · Vertical Takeoff and Landing p.15

Vertical T/O and landing from hover. Tolerance: hover ±½ altitude within 10 ft surface (or ±5 ft if >10 ft); position within 4 ft; heading ±10°.

Refs: 14 CFR Part 91; AC 90-95; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.IV.B · Hover Taxi p.15

Hover taxi procedures, clearances, runway-incursion avoidance, H/V considerations. Track ±4 ft, heading ±10° on pivot turns.

Refs: AC 91-73; AIM; Chart Supplements; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.IV.C · Air Taxi p.17

Air-taxi procedures, H/V considerations, airspeed/altitude selection, LTE-conducive condition avoidance. Altitude ±10 ft.

Refs: AC 91-73; AIM; Chart Supplements; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Hovering · LTE

CH.IV.D · Taxiing with Wheel-Type Landing Gear p.18

Ground taxi in wheel-type helicopter; flight-control wind correction; brake/cyclic/collective coordination. Track ±4 ft.

Refs: AC 91-73; AIM; Chart Supplements; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.IV.E · Slope Operations p.19

Slope selection, wind effects, dynamic-rollover considerations, manufacturer slope limits. Heading ±10°.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area V.Takeoffs, Landings, and Go-Arounds

Note: Confined Area + Pinnacle moved to Area IX (Special Operations) at the CPL level.

CH.V.A · Normal Takeoff and Climb p.21

Normal T/O, climb, rejected T/O. Climb attitude/airspeed ±10 kt.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.B · Normal and Crosswind Approach p.22

Normal/crosswind approach, ground-track correction, touchdown ±4 ft; awareness of wind, turbulence, VRS, wake.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.C · Maximum Performance Takeoff and Climb p.23

Max-perf T/O over an obstacle; climb attitude/airspeed ±5 kt; rotor/power management.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.D · Steep Approach p.24

Steep approach (15° max angle); VRS awareness; degraded visual environment / flat-light awareness.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.E · Rolling Takeoff (Wheel-Type Landing Gear) p.25

Rolling T/O in wheel-type helicopter; H/V considerations; translational-lift onset; transition to climb at ±10 kt.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.F · Shallow Approach and Running/Roll-On Landing p.26

Shallow approach; running/roll-on landing; ETL through surface contact; ground track and crosswind correction.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.V.G · Go-Around p.27

Recognition of need for go-around; timely decision; positive climb at airspeed ±10 kt; ATC coordination.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area VI.Performance Maneuvers

Note: evaluator must select Task A and at least one other Task.

CH.VI.A · Rapid Deceleration / Quick Stop p.29

Quick-stop purpose, atmospheric effects, wind correction. Heading ±10°; tail-boom clearance maintained throughout.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VI.B · Straight-In Autorotation in a Single-Engine Helicopter p.29

Power-off glide at autorotation airspeed ±10 kt; main rotor (Nr) in normal limits; terminate to a stabilized hover within 200 ft of designated point.

Refs: AC 61-140; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VI.C · Autorotation with Turns in a Single-Engine Helicopter p.31

Autorotation with turns; roll out no lower than 300 ft AGL; same termination tolerance as Task B (200 ft of designated point).

Refs: AC 61-140; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area VII.Navigation

CH.VII.A · Pilotage and Dead Reckoning p.33

Pilotage, dead-reckoning math, magnetic compass errors, checkpoint timing within 5 minutes of ETA. Altitude ±200 ft, heading ±15°. Verify position within 3 NM of planned route.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; Helicopter Route Charts; VFR Navigation Charts

CH.VII.B · Navigation Systems and Radar Services p.34

Ground-based and satellite nav including RAIM, course intercept/track, transponder, ADS-B. Altitude ±200 ft, heading ±15°.

Refs: AC 91-78; AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.VII.C · Diversion p.35

Diversion to alternate; reasonable estimate of heading/groundspeed/arrival/fuel; weather updating in flight. Altitude ±200 ft, heading ±15°.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; Helicopter Route Charts; VFR Navigation Charts

CH.VII.D · Lost Procedures p.35

Methods to determine position; assistance available; when to declare emergency. The "5 Cs": Climb, Conserve, Communicate, Confess, Comply.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; Helicopter Route Charts; VFR Navigation Charts

Area VIII.Emergency Operations

Note: Tasks G–J tested orally only. Task C tested in addition if applicant supplies a multiengine helicopter. Tasks L & M are new for CPL — basic instrument competency required at commercial level.

CH.VIII.A · Powerplant Failure in a Hover (Single-Engine) p.37

Hovering autorotation; touchdown with minimum movement; heading ±10° throughout.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.B · Powerplant Failure at Altitude (Single-Engine) p.38

Simulated engine failure at altitude; autorotation at airspeed ±10 kt; suitable landing area; terminate with power recovery at safe altitude.

Refs: AC 61-140; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.C · OEI Approach and Landing (Multiengine, Simulated) p.39

OEI approach with operating powerplant in OEI limits; flight profile altitude ±200 ft, airspeed ±20 kt, heading ±10°.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.D · Systems and Equipment Malfunctions p.39

Powerplant, electrical, flight instruments, pitot-static, EFD, landing gear, hydraulic, smoke/fire; recognition and response per RFM.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25

CH.VIII.E · Vortex Ring State (VRS) p.40

VRS conditions, aerodynamics, scenarios, recovery technique. Recover no lower than 1,000 ft AGL or per RFM. Recognize, announce, recover at first indication.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.F · Low Rotor RPM Recognition and Recovery p.41

Low Nr causes, aerodynamics, recovery; difference between low Nr and blade stall.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.G · Antitorque System Failure p.42 · oral only

Antitorque failure indications, RFM procedures, wind conditions favoring landing.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

LTE

CH.VIII.H · Dynamic Rollover p.42 · oral only

Conditions, aerodynamics, preventive technique, recovery during slope operations. SAFO 16016 cited.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM; SAFO 16016

CH.VIII.I · Ground Resonance p.43 · oral only

Conditions, recognition, contributing factors, preventive technique; corrective actions at low and normal Nr.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.J · Low Gravity (G) Recognition and Recovery p.44 · oral only

Low-G aerodynamics, mast bumping potential; control inputs to avoid and recover.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.K · Emergency Equipment and Survival Gear p.44

ELT operations; fire extinguisher; survival gear for climate extremes / mountainous / overwater operations; 48–72 hour survival readiness.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.VIII.L · Flight Solely by Reference to Instruments p.45NEW vs PPL

Basic attitude instrument flying — straight-and-level, climbs, turns, descents — solely by reference to instruments. Tolerance: altitude ±100 ft, heading ±10°, airspeed ±10 kt. Required at commercial level even without an instrument rating.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -15, -21, -25

CH.VIII.M · Recovery from Unusual Flight Attitudes p.46NEW vs PPL

Unusual-attitude prevention and recovery (nose-high and nose-low) by reference to instruments. IIMC/UIMC procedures. Risk includes low-G mast bumping if applicable.

Refs: AIM; FAA-H-8083-2, -15, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area IX.Special OperationsNEW vs PPL

Note: PPL ACS placed Confined Area + Pinnacle in Area V (Takeoffs/Landings). The CPL ACS elevates them to a separate Area at commercial-operations depth.

CH.IX.A · Confined Area Operations p.47

High and low recon; power-required vs power-available; suitable approach/termination/departure path; VRS, dynamic rollover, ground resonance, LTE awareness.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

CH.IX.B · Pinnacle Operations p.48

Pinnacle/platform approach and departure; high/low recon; wind/density-altitude analysis; same hazard list as Task A plus terrain considerations.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Area X.Postflight Procedures

CH.X.A · After Landing, Parking, and Securing p.50

Helicopter shutdown, securing, postflight inspection; minimize hazardous downwash; document discrepancies; safe parking.

Refs: FAA-H-8083-2, -21, -25; POH/RFM

Practical test outcomes & commercial-specific notes

Commercial limitations without an instrument rating (per 14 CFR § 61.133(b)): XC for compensation/hire limited to 50 NM from departure airport; carrying passengers at night for compensation/hire is prohibited. Most commercial helicopter pilots pursue an instrument rating to lift these restrictions.

Aeronautical experience (per 14 CFR § 61.129(c)): 150 hours total (50 in helicopters), 100 PIC (35 helicopter), 10 XC PIC (5 helicopter), 5 hours night T/O+landings, 5 hours instrument training, plus the long XC of ≥ 50 NM total with one landing ≥ 25 NM straight-line per § 61.129(c)(4)(i). The on-site Logbook calculator verifies eligibility.