Editorial framework on the ENAC skydiving license exam system. Specific dates and venues are not centrally published — coordinated school-by-school with current ENAC regulation.
We don't publish specific numbers (regulation articles, current dates, exam fee costs) without updated official ENAC PDF processed. This page is general framework — always consult your school for current procedures and dates.
The Italian system has four progressive licenses (A, B, C, D), each with jump prerequisites, flight hours, specific experience. The exam for each license typically has two components: theoretical (written test on regulation, aerodynamics, emergency procedures, weather) and practical (in-air evaluation + landings + demonstration of level-specific skills).
Exams don't have a centralised public calendar. They're coordinated school-by-school with ENAC — typically when the school has a group of ready candidates. The school signals ENAC, ENAC sends national examiner, the session is organised on-site. There's no "ENAC exam date in Bergamo June 15" — there's "school X has an exam session planned, contact them for info".
For current dates: contact the school where you did AFF or where you plan to complete the license. High-volume Italian centres (Thiene, Reggio, Fano, Sardegna Skydive, etc.) typically run 3-6 exam sessions per year.
First level: 25 minimum jumps, basic skill demonstration (stable exit, altitude deployment, landing pattern).
Second level: additional jumps, intermediate skills (coach docking, freefall group, advanced canopy control).
Third level: access to advanced DZ roles, night skills, water landing, demonstration. Requires consolidated jumps.
Fourth level: access to instructor rating (tandem, AFF), recognised coaching. Maximum ENAC license.