Confidential Therapy for Pilots and Aviation Professionals

The FAA now says therapy is compatible with your certificate

In May 2026 the FAA published guidance stating that counseling is encouraged when medically appropriate, and that psychotherapy is compatible with an unrestricted medical certificate. CEREVITY matches pilots with licensed clinicians who understand the aeromedical system and will tell you the truth about it. 100% virtual. Private-pay.

All 50 statesNationwide telehealth coverage
48 hoursTypical time to first session
Private-payNo insurance paper trail
7 days8 AM–8 PM Pacific

The question every pilot asks first

Will talking to someone cost me my medical certificate?

Aviation runs on hangar rumor about this, and the rumor is now out of date. Here is what the FAA actually published on May 27, 2026, including the part that is inconvenient.

The FAA says therapy is compatible with flying

On May 27, 2026 the FAA added three documents to the Guide for Aviation Medical Examiners, one of them written for the psychotherapists who treat you. Its language is plain: counseling or therapy is encouraged when medically appropriate, and psychotherapy is compatible with both an unrestricted medical certificate and a special issuance. The FAA also states that speaking with a therapist does not automatically create a diagnosis.

Nothing is reported by us. The disclosure is yours, at your next medical

CEREVITY files nothing with the FAA. No claim, no diagnosis code, no carrier record exists, because private-pay creates none. What the FAA does require is that you list visits to licensed healthcare providers on your own MedXPress application, and its May 2026 FAQ is explicit that the timing is yours: you are not obliged to report until your next application for a medical certificate. Listing therapy is not the same as being deferred, and where there is no diagnosis an examiner may record the history as not significant and issue.

Your records almost never travel, and ours are built for it

The FAA's own answer to whether it will see your therapy records is: usually not, and if documentation is requested it is usually a brief summary from the therapist. The agency also published guidance for the psychotherapists who treat pilots: keep process notes separate from progress notes, use precise DSM-5-TR language, and neither inflate nor minimize. It closes by telling therapists unwilling to meet those requirements to think hard before taking a pilot as a client. Most therapists have never read that document. Ours work to it.

What actually walks into session with a pilot

Not generic stress. Six patterns our clinicians treat every week in aviation professionals.

01The silence that is trained in

You learned early that the safe answer to every medical question is no. That habit does not stay confined to the exam room, and it is the thing the new guidance is trying to undo.

02A life measured in cycles

Body clock permanently displaced, sleep debt as a professional condition, and a physiology that never fully lands.

03The marriage conducted by text

Home four days out of fourteen, an entire domestic life happening without you, and the strange status of a guest in your own house.

04Grief and incident carryover

The event you flew through, the loss you took a leave for, the diversion that still runs on a loop. And a job where you are expected to be the calm one.

05Retirement as a cliff

A mandatory end date and an identity built entirely on the left seat, approaching at a known speed.

06Alcohol at the edge of the rules

The layover culture, the bottle-to-throttle math, and the private knowledge of exactly how close you have run it.

What the work actually looks like

Procedural, briefed, and honest about the system you are operating inside.

The first month

The opening sessions establish what is actually happening: sleep, mood, drinking, the incident or loss that is still active, and how much of it is the schedule rather than something clinical underneath the schedule. Validated instruments give a baseline. Pilots tend to under-report by reflex, and a clinician who knows this population expects that and works with it rather than against it.

By session three or four you have a formulation, a plan, and a clear-eyed picture of where, if anywhere, the aeromedical system intersects with it. Very often the answer is that a course of therapy with no diagnosis and no medication is exactly the situation the FAA's 2026 guidance was written to make survivable, and the relief of knowing that specifically is itself part of the treatment.

A clinician who has actually read the FAA's guidance

The FAA's May 2026 release included a document addressed to the psychotherapists who treat pilots and controllers, and it tells you to hand it to your therapist at the first visit. It asks specific things of them: keep psychotherapy process notes separate from clinical progress notes so that a request for records does not sweep up the raw material of your sessions, write in precise DSM-5-TR terms, and avoid both upcoding and minimization. It ends by telling therapists who cannot work that way to think carefully before accepting a pilot at all.

That is not an academic point. A therapist who does not understand aviation can end a career that did not need to end: an offhand diagnosis written into a note, a medication started without regard for certification, or a well-meaning assurance that none of this needs disclosing. What you want is a clinician who treats the person and understands the file, and who was already working this way before the FAA wrote it down.

What tends to change

Early: sleep quality, the intrusive replay of an event, the fuse at home in the seventy-two hours you actually get there. The drinking that had quietly become structural starts to look like what it is.

Later the work reaches identity: the fact that the certificate has become the person, so that any threat to it feels like a threat to your existence, and retirement reads as death rather than as a change. That fusion is treatable, and it is far easier to treat before the date arrives than after.

Therapy, not coaching: the distinction matters here

Much of what pilots find when they search for help is executive coaching. It has value for skill-building, but it cannot diagnose, treat, or legally protect what you disclose.

CEREVITY, Licensed TherapyExecutive Coaching
Who provides itLicensed psychologists & clinicians (PhD, PsyD, LCSW, LMFT)Unregulated; anyone may use the title
Can treat anxiety, depression, burnoutYes: evidence-based clinical treatmentNo; outside its scope, and often unrecognized
ConfidentialityLegally protected; HIPAA-governed clinical record you controlContractual at best; no legal privilege
Insurance paper trailNone. Private-pay by designN/A
Right forAnxiety, depression, grief, sleep disruption, alcohol use, when something is genuinely wrong and pushing through the next rotation has stopped workingSkill-building and performance goals when nothing is clinically wrong

Concierge by design: you never browse a directory

You tell us the seat you sit in. We match you to the clinician who already knows it.

  1. Confidential intakeA dedicated coordinator, not a call center, handles everything from the first message on.
  2. Matched to a specialistWe pair you with a clinician who treats pilots and aviation professionals as core caseload, not the closest available calendar slot.
  3. In session within ~48 hoursEarly mornings, late evenings, weekends. Sessions fit your calendar, not the reverse.
  4. Measured progressValidated instruments at intake and ongoing, so you can see whether it is working.

Where we practice

Nationwide

Coverage across the United States: our psychologists hold PsyPact authority spanning the participating states, and individually licensed clinicians cover the rest, including states outside the compact. You tell us where you are; matching handles the licensure.

No office. On purpose. No commute, no waiting room, no chance encounter with someone from your board, your OR, or your firm.

The avoidance is documented, and the FAA is trying to fix it

56.1%

of surveyed U.S. pilots reported a history of healthcare avoidance behavior because they feared losing their aeromedical certificate.

Source: Hoffman et al., Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (2022)
12.6%

of airline pilots responding to a validated depression screen met the threshold for clinical depression, and 4.1% reported suicidal thoughts within the prior two weeks.

Source: Wu et al., Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan (2016)
20%

is the FAA's stated initial deferral rate for mental health diagnoses, while only about 0.1% to 0.2% of cases end in a final denial.

Source: Federal Aviation Administration, Fact Checking Medical Myths in Aviation

Treated by clinicians, reviewed by clinicians

Every CEREVITY clinician is independently licensed and works with pilots as core caseload, not a curiosity. This page is clinically reviewed by Martha Fernandez, LCSW, Co-Founder and Licensed Clinical Social Worker.

  • PhD & PsyD psychologists with PsyPact mobility authority
  • LCSW / LMFT / LPCC clinicians, multi-state licensed
  • Evidence-based care: CBT, ACT, psychodynamic & somatic approaches
  • HIPAA-secure telehealth; records stay between you and your clinician

One seat, one story

I flew for eleven years telling nobody anything. Not my AME, not my wife, not the guy in the right seat. After my father died I was not sleeping and I was drinking on every layover, and I still would not call anyone, because I had convinced myself that one phone call ends the career. What finally moved me was getting a straight answer about what was actually true instead of what the crew room says is true.

Airline captain, narrow-body fleet, 15 months with CEREVITY

Shared with permission by a former client; identifying details altered to protect confidentiality. Individual experiences vary.

You run a checklist before every flight. You have never once run one on yourself.

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Questions pilots ask before starting

Does CEREVITY report anything to the FAA, my AME, or my airline?
No. We are not an aviation medical examiner, not a HIMS provider, and have no relationship with any regulator or carrier. There is no channel through which we could report anything, and private-pay means no insurance claim, diagnosis code, or carrier record is created either. The disclosure obligation that exists is yours, not ours: the FAA asks you to list visits to licensed healthcare providers on your MedXPress application, and its May 2026 guidance states you are not obliged to report until your next application for a medical certificate. We will be straight with you about that rather than implying that paying cash makes the question disappear.
Does therapy show up as a diagnosis, or get me deferred?
Not by itself. The FAA states plainly that speaking with a therapist does not automatically create a diagnosis, and that psychotherapy is compatible with an unrestricted medical certificate as well as with special issuance. On whether the agency reads your file, its own answer is that it usually does not, and that when documentation is requested it is typically a brief summary from your therapist. Where there is no diagnosis, an examiner may note the history as reviewed and not significant and issue in the office. Where there is a diagnosis, it runs through the FAA's disposition table: some are still issued in the office, others are deferred for review.
What if I need medication?
That is a different and slower pathway, and we will say so plainly. A conditionally acceptable antidepressant means a special issuance, and your examiner cannot issue in the office. As of December 2025 the FAA shortened the required period of clinical stability on a stable dose from six months to three. Several common medications remain unacceptable outright. This is exactly the decision worth making with a clinician who knows the aeromedical landscape and can coordinate with a HIMS-qualified examiner, rather than one who prescribes first and learns the consequences afterward.
I live in one state and am based in another, and I am rarely in either. How does licensure work?
Licensure follows where you are physically located during a session, not where you are based or domiciled. Within the PsyPact member states your psychologist's authority moves with you. Outside that footprint it is state-by-state, so tell your intake coordinator your actual pattern, and we match you with clinicians licensed for the places you truly spend time. This is our logistics problem, not yours.
How much does private-pay therapy cost?
Session fees are published on our pricing page. Most PPO plans reimburse 60–80% of out-of-network session costs after deductible, if you choose to file. Many of our clients deliberately don't, keeping care entirely off insurance records.
Why does private-pay matter for someone in my position?
Insurance billing creates a diagnosis code that is stored and shared with your carrier, and it can surface in life-insurance underwriting, licensing reviews, clearance investigations, and legal proceedings. Private-pay means no code, no claim, no third-party record. What you say in session stays in session.
Clinically reviewed by Martha Fernandez, LCSW, Co-Founder and Licensed Clinical Social Worker · Last reviewed July 2026

You are back on the line next week either way.

The question is what you are carrying into the flight deck with you. Matching takes one conversation, with a clinician who knows what the FAA actually published and what it actually means.

Seven days a week · 8 AM – 8 PM Pacific Time · Concierge clients receive same-day priority