Your first paramotoring course

Paramotoring doesn't start in a store. It starts in a flat field with an instructor and a wing that won't stop trying to fly away. Here's what your first training course actually looks like.

By Colin B. · Published June 7, 2026

Paramotoring has a reputation for being the simplest form of powered flight to get into, and in some ways that’s true. No airport. No tower clearance. No runway. You launch from a farmer’s field at dawn and you’re airborne. But simple to enter doesn’t mean simple to learn, and the training process has a specific shape that most people don’t know before they show up.

This is what your first certified training course actually looks like, from the first morning on the ground to the day you fly solo.

Days 1-2: The wing is trying to kill you (gently)

Before you ever touch a paramotor engine, you spend your first two days learning to handle the wing. This is called ground handling or kiting, and it’s the single most important skill in paramotoring. The motor is just thrust. The wing is what keeps you alive.

Kiting means controlling the canopy with your hands while you stand on the ground, walking forward and backward as the wind demands, feeling the pressure in the risers, keeping the wing overhead and stable. It sounds simple. It isn’t.

A paraglider canopy wants to do one of two things: fly, or collapse. Your job in the first two days is to develop the physical intuition to keep it in the middle state, overhead and pressurized, responding to your inputs. Most beginners spend these days looking like they’re losing a fight with a parachute. That’s correct. You are.

What you’re building in these days isn’t technique exactly. It’s a kinesthetic vocabulary. A sense of what the wing is telling you through the risers and brake toggles. Your instructor will give you verbal cues, and then stand back and let you figure out how they translate to the thing in your hands.

man wearing black and red suit during daytime
Photo by Michael Kubler on Unsplash

By the end of day two, you’ll be able to bring the wing up overhead, stabilize it, and walk with it controlled. This feels like nothing. It is, in fact, almost everything.

Days 3-4: Adding the engine

The motor goes on your back for the first time on day three. Nothing else changes. You wear the harness, you feel the weight, you practice ground handling with the full load on your shoulders.

This is where paramotoring gets physical. A foot-launch paramotor weighs 55-75 lbs. Running with that weight on your back while simultaneously controlling a wing overhead is awkward in a way you cannot simulate. The first few attempts at a launch run will feel chaotic. One leg is fighting the weight; the other leg is trying to accelerate; your arms are working the brake toggles; your brain is monitoring the wing overhead and the ground in front of you simultaneously.

The key insight instructors hammer on here: the wing comes up before you run. You inflate the canopy first, let it rise overhead and stabilize, feel it come overhead and forward, and only then do you accelerate into a run. Students who try to run and launch the wing at the same time are doing both badly.

Day four is typically low flights: two, three feet off the ground, hops more than flights, landing immediately after lift. These are not the launch you imagine. They’re confidence reps. You’re building the motor memory for the transition from running to flying so that by your first real flight it doesn’t feel foreign.

Days 5-7: Your first real flights

Somewhere in here, you fly. A real flight, climbing to altitude (typically 300-500 feet), flying a simple circuit, and landing.

The first flight is usually shorter than people expect: five to ten minutes, not an hour in the sky. The instructor wants you in the air, but they also want you to handle the landing while you still have energy and focus. Paramotoring landings are as important as launches, and they’re easier to manage early in the day before fatigue sets in.

What surprises most new pilots on their first real flight is how quiet it is. The engine is behind you and the wind muffles the mechanical noise. The world is very flat from 400 feet, and very large. The fields you drove past on the way to the launch site stretch out into a patchwork. You can see the road you came in on.

The technical challenges in flight are: throttle management (keeping altitude), brake input (steering), and situational awareness (knowing where you are relative to your landing zone). Instructors communicate by radio. Most schools have a second pilot or spotter on the ground watching you.

Days 8-10: Solo flight and what comes next

By the end of a typical ten-day course, you’re flying supervised solos. You’re in the air without the instructor actively coaching every input. You’re managing the wing, the engine, and the airspace yourself, with the instructor watching from the ground.

Solo doesn’t mean independent. You’re still flying within parameters the instructor set: a specific area, a ceiling, specific weather conditions that you and they have agreed are within your competence. The certification you earn from a USPPA course is a starting point, not a destination.

What you’ll leave with:

  • The ability to inflate and control a wing in moderate winds
  • The ability to launch, fly a circuit, and land reliably
  • An understanding of the weather and airspace rules for your flying site
  • A framework for making go/no-go decisions based on conditions

What you won’t have yet, and shouldn’t pretend to have, is judgment under unusual conditions. That comes from hours and from mentorship by more experienced pilots in your local community.

The right move after your training course is to find local pilots flying your region and join them. The paramotoring community is small and welcoming in a way that bigger sports often aren’t. People know the land, the local weather patterns, and the landowners who’ll let you use their fields. That local knowledge is worth more than any gear upgrade.

What you’ll probably get wrong (and that’s fine)

Every new pilot fails at the same handful of things. Here’s what’s coming:

Overcontrolling the wing on the ground. Beginners yank the brakes when the wing dips to one side instead of making small, early corrections. The wing oscillates, collapses, and lands on your head. The fix is small inputs early, not big inputs late.

Running too early on launch. Students start their run before the wing is overhead and pressurized. Result: the wing pulls backward instead of lifting you. You fall on your face. The fix is waiting a half-beat longer at the start of the run.

Throttle anxiety in flight. New pilots modulate the throttle constantly in flight, bobbing up and down, never settling into trim. Trim speed is your friend. Find it, use it, stop fiddling.

Landing long. Beginners are often too high on final approach and overshoot the intended landing zone. Conservative approach angles early. Learn to read your height above ground relative to your target.

None of these mistakes are character flaws. They’re the specific failures of someone building a new kinesthetic skill. Your instructor has seen all of them hundreds of times and is not judging you for any of them.


Ready to think about gear? See our paramotoring gear guide for what to buy before your first training course, what your instructor will help you choose, and what you can skip entirely for the first year.