Air India’s pilots, cabin crew to get revised compensation

The guaranteed flying allowance component will be doubled from the current 20 hours to 40 hours.

Update: 2023-04-17 21:30 GMT
Representative Image

NEW DELHI: Air India has revamped the compensation structure for pilots and cabin crew, including increasing the per-hour flying rate for pilots, according to a source.

Under the new structure, part of the Tata Group-owned airline’s five-year transformation plan, salaries will be hiked for more than 2,700 pilots across Air India and AIX Connect (including Air Asia India and Air India Express) as well as for more than 5,600 of Air India’s cabin crew, as per the source.

The guaranteed flying allowance component will be doubled from the current 20 hours to 40 hours. There will also be additional compensation for pilots undergoing training for command upgrade and conversion training for the time spent in-ground and simulator training, the source added.

Further, Air India will hike the pilots’ per-hour flying and flying allowance rates. The source said the airline will introduce an additional reward to recognise the long service of its tenured staff and also double the stipend for trainee pilots.

Among others, the contracts of nearly 800 FTC (Fixed Term Contract) pilots, which were earlier renewed for a stipulated period of 5 years, will now be extended until the pilots attain the age of 58 years.

Air India has about 4,700 FTC cabin crew and nearly 1,000 permanent cabin crew. Further, Air India will introduce two additional levels/designations - junior first officer and senior commander.

A large number of senior pilots, who have flown for four or more years as commanders, will be promoted to the senior commander rank, giving them instant inclusion into the management cadre with extra allowance for executive duties, the source said.

The cabin crew organisation structure for both permanent and FTC cabin crew has been re-designated into four segments - trainee cabin crew, cabin crew, cabin senior and cabin executive.

As per the source, the trainee stipends for fresher and experienced cabin crew will be hiked by more than 20 per cent. The airline will also double the domestic layover allowance and the allowance for check crew. Besides, it has also introduced additional allowances for cabin supervisors and for their grooming.

In February, Air India announced plans to hire more than 4,200 cabin crew trainees and 900 pilots this year. The airline has also placed orders for 470 planes with Boeing and Airbus.

Visit news.dtnext.in to explore our interactive epaper!

Download the DT Next app for more exciting features!

Click here for iOS

Click here for Android

Tags:    

Similar News