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Apollo MedFlight

Is this your company?

Don't walk, Run Away - Pilot Apollo MedFlight Employee Review

1.0
20 June 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

They are so good at operating in the gray shady areas of the rules.

Cons

Read this, please ---> It's not worth it. Hostile management, an environment which threatens your certificate, good ol' boys club, mismanaged by angry kids, a mean girls club. Maintenance decisions will leave you with a lot of emotional trauma as an air medical pilot. Training standards barely exist. There are almost no rules on paper, and even those, the management doesn't want to know. It's not that they don't play by the rules, it's that they don't care enough to even know what they are. This company will find any and every legal loophole and exploit it shamelessly. Be ready to have them try and use you to do their dirt, and put your cert number on it. You willl fly some of the shabbiest aircraft, maintainted by the least experienced mechanics. Your experience does not count for anything here and guys fresh out of their COM or A&P will make the same as you do no matter your experience. The benefits are the low end of moderate, and so is the pay. If you are reading this because your head will be on your own pillow every night, and you will see your family more, I promise you it is not worth it. Read some of the other reviews too. This operator is a fly by night.

Explore other reviews about Apollo MedFlight

5.0
6 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great flying job, lots of single PIC time on C90

Cons

Most places are closed at night, pack a lunch bag.

1.0
23 Feb 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Aircraft are serviceable most of the time. Clinical crews are competent and easy to work with. You’ll quickly learn how to operate under pressure — whether you want to or not.

Cons

This company presents itself publicly as a pilot-centric, safety-driven operation. Internally, it feels far more like a numbers-driven machine where pilots are expected to quietly adapt rather than speak up. There’s a noticeable disconnect between what is advertised during hiring and what daily life actually looks like once you’re on the line or more so any management position. Operational expectations are rarely unreasonable on paper, but the culture surrounding them often is. There’s a persistent sense that declining flights, questioning decisions, or asking for clarification puts you under a microscope. Nothing is said directly — it’s more subtle than that — but most experienced pilots will recognize the tone immediately. Communication from leadership is inconsistent at best. Policies change without meaningful explanation, and input from line pilots tends to disappear into a void. You may hear phrases like “we value feedback” or “open-door policy,” but they don’t seem to translate into visible action. Scheduling stability is another sore point. What’s described as structured and predictable can shift quickly, and flexibility is expected almost exclusively from pilots rather than management. Planning life outside of work becomes difficult, which contributes to fatigue and burnout over time. Turnover is telling. You’ll notice a steady stream of new faces and a steady absence of long-term ones. That pattern alone should raise questions for anyone considering staying beyond the short term.

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