HR-2247-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Tim Burchett (R-TN)
What it does
This bill would allow pilots to present either a physical original or a digital copy (stored on an electronic device or cloud platform) of their airman certificate and medical certificate when requested by an FAA inspector. Under current regulations, pilots must carry and present physical copies of these documents. The bill would require the FAA to update its regulations to implement this change.
Who benefits
Active pilots — approximately 750,000 certificated pilots in the U.S. — who would no longer be required to carry physical documents during flight. Pilots who frequently travel and risk losing or forgetting physical certificates. New pilots who may find digital management more convenient. Electronic device and cloud storage platform providers who may see increased use of their services for document storage.
Who is hurt
FAA inspectors who may face added complexity in verifying the authenticity of digital certificates, particularly in areas with poor connectivity. Pilots who are less comfortable with digital technology or who lack reliable access to electronic devices. Potentially, aviation security interests if digital certificates are more susceptible to forgery or tampering than physical ones. Third-party document verification services that currently support physical certificate management.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that requiring physical-only certificates is an outdated standard out of step with how most official documents — including driver's licenses in many states — are now managed digitally. They contend that the FAA already maintains a digital registry of all airman certificates, making digital verification straightforward, and that modernizing this requirement reduces an unnecessary burden on the roughly 750,000 certificated U.S. pilots without compromising safety.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that aviation safety depends on reliable, tamper-resistant documentation, and that digital certificates stored on personal devices or cloud platforms introduce risks of forgery, unauthorized alteration, or inaccessibility due to dead batteries or connectivity failures. They contend that until the FAA establishes robust digital verification standards, accepting digital copies could create enforcement gaps that physical certificates — which are harder to replicate — do not present.