Flight Ledger for Experimental Exhibition Turbine Operators

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 Ledger

§274(d) substantiation, done right

Every 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.

Currency & inspections on one dashboard

§61.58 proficiency, condition inspections, transponder and static checks, parachute repacks, LODA renewals, medical and BFR — color-coded countdowns, nothing slips.

Insurance & airshow paperwork

Policy limits organized the way DD Form 2400 asks for them, so the annual airshow packet stops being a scavenger hunt.

Isn't ForeFlight enough?

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.

Log on your phone. Review on the big screen.

The iOS app captures flights at the aircraft; the web app is where the tables, compliance countdowns, and year-end reporting live.

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