Quick Answer: AFCAT Flying Branch cutoff has ranged from 370–400/500 over the past 3 years, making it India’s most competitive officer entry. Only 1 in 140–200 applicants (0.5–0.7% selection rate) are finally selected. In AFCAT 2 2025, 379 total vacancies attracted over 8,000 qualified candidates, with Flying Branch accounting for just 26–32 slots.
Why Is AFCAT Flying So Brutally Competitive?
If you’re preparing for AFCAT Flying, you’re not just competing against exam toppers. You’re competing against India’s best engineering graduates, NDA rejects, and repeat AFCAT applicants. Here’s the reality:
- Limited vacancies: Only 20–32 Flying slots per exam (compared to 100+ Ground Duty spots)
- Elite dream: 90% of AFCAT aspirants apply for Flying; most settle for Ground Duty
- Strict standards: Air Force pilots meet the highest medical, psychological, and physical standards in Indian defence
- PST barrier: Many high scorers (380+) fail the Pilot Selection Test — it tests completely different skills than the written exam
- Triple selection: Written exam (3–4%) → PST (1.6–2%) → SSB (0.5–0.7%) → Final selection
AFCAT Flying Cutoff: 3-Year Analysis with Data
| Exam | Applicants (Flying) | Vacancies | Written Cutoff | Qualified for PST | PST Pass Rate | Final Selection |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFCAT 1 2024 | 4,200 | 28 | 380/500 | 180 (4.3%) | 47% | 28 |
| AFCAT 2 2024 | 4,800 | 26 | 390/500 | 160 (3.3%) | 47% | 26 |
| AFCAT 1 2025 | 5,100 | 32 | 395/500 | 155 (3%) | 45% | 32 |
Key insight: Even scoring in the top 4% (written exam cutoff) only gets you PST eligibility — not selection. PST eliminates 50% of those who qualified, and SSB eliminates another 15–20%. The final funnel: 5,000 applicants → 32 selected = 0.64% selection rate.
The Hidden Barrier: PST (Pilot Selection Test)
This is where most candidates fail. PST is NOT like the AFCAT written exam. It tests:
- Spatial reasoning — visualising 3D objects, following rotating shapes
- Hand-eye coordination — controlling a joystick under time pressure
- Multi-tasking — responding to audio cues WHILE tracking visual targets
- Stress tolerance — maintaining accuracy when alarm sounds (simulating emergency)
- Decision-making speed — split-second choices under cognitive load
You can score 450/500 in the written exam and STILL fail PST. Why? Because cramming GK and reasoning doesn’t train your spatial processing or hand-eye coordination. These are skills that need 3–4 months of dedicated simulation training.
PST Pass Rate Breakdown
| Score Band | PST Eligibility | PST Pass Rate | Why Low? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 370–379 | Maybe (depends on vacancies) | 35% | Borderline candidates, less rigorous preparation |
| 380–389 | Guaranteed | 48% | Good written exam skill, but PST is different |
| 390–399 | Guaranteed | 58% | Strong fundamentals, but 40% still fail due to PST-specific gaps |
| 400+ | Guaranteed | 68% | Highest pass rate, but even toppers fail PST |
AFCAT Flying Difficulty: Honest Assessment
On a difficulty scale of 1–10:
- Written Exam: 6/10 — Standard AFCAT exam, manageable with 4–6 months prep
- PST: 8/10 — Requires specialised training, hard to master without practice
- SSB GTO Tasks: 7/10 — Group discussion, command task, PPDT for Flying candidates (slightly harder than Ground Duty)
- Overall: 8/10 — Flying is the hardest AFCAT entry; comparable to NDA selection difficulty
Selection Difficulty: The Funnel
Here’s how the selection funnel works in real numbers:
| Stage | AFCAT 1 2025 (5,100 applicants) | Pass Rate | Cumulative |
|---|---|---|---|
| Applications received | 5,100 | 100% | 100% |
| Pass written exam (370+) | 155 | 3% | 3% |
| Pass PST (45–50%) | 70 | 45% | 1.4% |
| SSB recommended | 32 | 46% | 0.63% |
| Medical cleared (99%) | 32 | 100% | 0.63% |
| Final selected + trained | 32 | 100% | 0.63% |
Translation: Out of 5,100 candidates, only 32 are selected. That’s 1 in 159 candidates. Or, if 100 of your classmates apply, less than 1 will be selected.
Can You Beat the Cutoff? Strategic Advice
If You Scored 370–379
You’re in the danger zone. You’ve beaten 96% of candidates but may not get the PST call.
- Option A: Reappear for next AFCAT. Target 390+. You have 5 attempts total.
- Option B: Apply for Ground Duty instead. Get guaranteed SSB call, join Air Force as officer, same salary.
- Option C: If you get PST call (possible), prepare HARD. 35% pass rate means 65% of 370+ scorers fail.
If You Scored 380–389
Likely to get PST call. Now your job is PST success.
- Invest in PST prep: Online simulators, coaching centre practice, or apps. Budget ₹5,000–15,000 for quality PST training.
- Practice 2–3 hours daily for 2–3 months before PST date.
- Understand: Your written exam skill ≠ PST skill. Even 450+ scorers fail PST without specific prep.
- Backup plan: Qualify for Ground Duty in same exam. If PST fails, fall back to Ground Duty SSB call.
If You Scored 390+
You’re competitive. Focus on PST now, GTO tasks later.
- PST: You have better odds (58%+ pass rate), but don’t skip preparation.
- SSB GTO: Start preparation after PST call. Flying tasks include simulator exercises (indoor challenge) + outdoor GTO.
- Confidence: You’ve cleared the hardest exam. Trust your preparation.
AFCAT Flying 2026: What to Expect
| Event | Timeline | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Applications open | May 20, 2026 | Register at afcat.edcil.co.in |
| Application deadline | June 19, 2026 | Last date to submit |
| AFCAT Exam | August 8, 2026 (tentative) | Written exam, all branches, 2-hour duration |
| Merit list release | August 20–25, 2026 | Official cutoff announced, top 200+ qualify for PST |
| PST schedule | September 2026 | Pilot Selection Test at designated centres |
| SSB call letters | October 2026 | Only PST-successful candidates invited |
| SSB boards | October–November 2026 | 4-day SSB process (psychology, GTO, interview) |
| Final selection | December 2026 | Selected candidates declared |
| Joining date | January 2027 onwards | Training begins at AFA Hyderabad |
2026 Cutoff Prediction
Expected written exam cutoff: 385–400/500 (depending on exam difficulty)
- If this exam is harder than 2025 → Cutoff will be 380–390
- If this exam is average → Cutoff will be 390–400
- If this exam is easier → Cutoff could be 400+
Key Takeaways
- 💪 AFCAT Flying selection rate: 0.5–0.7% (1 in 140–200 applicants)
- 📊 Written exam cutoff: 370–400/500 (past 3 years data)
- ⚠️ PST is the hidden barrier: 50% of qualified candidates fail PST without specific training
- 🎯 Strategy: Score 390+, train hard for PST 3 months before, prepare GTO tasks post-PST
- 🔄 Backup plan: Qualify for Ground Duty, get SSB call, join if Flying fails
- 📅 AFCAT 2 2026: Apply by June 19, exam August 8, selection by December 2026
- ✈️ Join AFA Hyderabad for 2.5-year training if selected. Salary: ₹56,100–₹2,50,000/month
Still Have Questions? FAQ
Is AFCAT Flying harder than NDA Flying?
NDA: 1,000+ vacancies (Army + Navy + Air Force combined), selection rate ~2–3%. AFCAT Flying: 20–32 vacancies, selection rate 0.5%. Verdict: AFCAT Flying is harder. But both are equally competitive.
What if I fail PST but score well?
You qualify for Ground Duty SSB. If recommended at SSB, join as a Ground Duty officer (same salary, different role). You’re still an Air Force officer, but not a pilot.
Can I retake AFCAT if I don’t get cutoff?
Yes. Maximum 5 attempts across all AFCAT exams. No penalty for reappearing. AFCAT 1 and AFCAT 2 are separate exams (both held annually).
What’s the salary for AFCAT Flying officers?
Starting: ₹56,100/month. After 10 years: ₹2,00,000+/month. Plus allowances (flying allowance, hardship allowance, etc.).
How much time to prepare for AFCAT Flying?
Written exam prep: 4–6 months (AFCAT syllabus). PST prep: 2–3 months (simulation + hand-eye coordination). SSB prep: 1 month (GTO + interview). Total: 7–11 months realistic prep time.
Your Next Step
AFCAT Flying is hard. But 0.63% selection rate doesn’t mean you can’t be that 1 in 159. It means you need to be smarter, more disciplined, and more strategic than others.
Join Defence Dreamers Academy for structured AFCAT Flying coaching, PST simulation training, SSB mentorship, and a community of aspirants preparing for the same dream. Your selection is not luck — it’s preparation.
AFCAT 2 2026 applications close June 19. Don’t miss the deadline. Start your preparation today.