Flight Ledger is built for contemporaneous IRS §274(d) business-use records, aircraft currency, annual and condition inspections, airshows and more — logged at the hangar, minutes after shutdown.
Open Flight LedgerEvery flight is stamped the moment you save it — "at or near the time of flight" — with business purpose, passengers, and hours. The timestamp is permanent by design.
§61.58 proficiency, condition inspections, transponder and static checks, parachute repacks, LODA renewals, medical and BFR — color-coded countdowns, nothing slips.
Policy limits organized the way DD Form 2400 asks for them, so the annual airshow packet stops being a scavenger hunt.
No — and it's not ForeFlight's fault. A pilot logbook defends your certificate: hours, landings, currency. IRS §274(d) demands four things per flight, recorded at or near the time — amount, time & place, business purpose, and the business relationship of everyone aboard — or the flight flips to personal in the audit. Flight Ledger makes each one a required field, stamps every entry with a permanent creation timestamp so contemporaneity is provable, and prints the substantiation log and business-use percentage your CPA puts on Form 4562. Keep ForeFlight for flying. Flight Ledger defends the deduction.
The iOS app captures flights at the aircraft; the web app is where the tables, compliance countdowns, and year-end reporting live.