Skydiving Jobs
65open roles across dropzones, wind tunnels, manufacturers & associations - updated daily.
Indoor Skydiving Instructor
iFLY Indoor Skydiving
£26,500–£36,500/yr
14d ago
Customer Service Receptionist
iFLY Indoor Skydiving
£24,022–£25,822/yr
14d ago
Skydiving Careers: The Complete Industry Guide
Everything you need to know to find work in the skydiving industry, from entry-level packing to commercial pilot roles.
What Jobs Exist in the Skydiving Industry?
The skydiving industry employs far more people than most outsiders realise. A medium-sized dropzone with two aircraft and 100 jumps per day requires tandem instructors, AFF instructors, videographers, a manifest team, ground crew, a head rigger and packing staff, a pilot (or two), a mechanic, a customer care team, a social media coordinator, and often a restaurant or bar. Larger operators like Skydive Arizona (12 aircraft) or Experience Co's multi-DZ network employ hundreds of people across every function.
Beyond individual dropzones, the broader ecosystem includes parachute manufacturers (Airborne Systems, Performance Designs, Sun Path, UPT), indoor wind tunnel operators (iFLY with 80+ locations globally, City Skydive, Tunnel One), national governing bodies (USPA in the US, British Skydiving in the UK, APF in Australia), and specialist suppliers. The 2026 market is characterised by acute shortages in safety-critical roles - riggers, A&P mechanics, and multi-rated instructors - giving experienced candidates strong negotiating power.
Salary Ranges by Role (2025–2026)
| Role | Country | Typical Pay | Structure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tandem Instructor | USA | $35–$60 | Per jump | Multi-rated earns more |
| Tandem Instructor | Australia | AUD $70–100k | Salaried | Experience Co network |
| Tandem Instructor | UK | £28–45k | Salaried | British Skydiving certification |
| AFF Instructor | USA | $20–$45 | Per jump | Often combined with tandem |
| Jump Pilot (Twin Otter) | USA | $50–90k | Annual | Type rating required |
| Jump Pilot (Captain) | UAE | $80–120k | Annual | DHC-6 type rating + ATPL |
| A&P Mechanic | USA | $24–$30 | Per hour | Fleet size matters |
| Senior Rigger | USA | $45–80k | Annual | FAA cert + Sigma preferred |
| Entry Packer | USA | $15–20 | Per hour | Training provided at many DZs |
| Tunnel Instructor | UK | £26.5–36.5k | Annual | No experience needed |
| Tunnel Instructor | USA | $20 | Per hour | iFLY + health benefits |
| Manifest Staff | USA | $16–18 | Per hour | Burble software valued |
| Content Creator | USA | $35–55k | Annual | Adobe + skydiving background |
| USPA Content Editor | USA | $50–55k | Annual | Journalism degree required |
How to Become a Tandem Skydiving Instructor
Becoming a tandem instructor is the most common professional goal in the sport. The path varies by country:
- United States (USPA): Get your A-licence (25 jumps minimum, typically 50–100 in practice), then B-licence (50 jumps), then C-licence (200 jumps). Earn your USPA Coach rating at around 200 jumps. Apply for the USPA Tandem Instructor course - requires 500 jumps, 3 years licensed, USPA membership, and a recommendation from your DZ. Train on either UPT Sigma or Strong Enterprises systems.
- United Kingdom (British Skydiving): Progress from student to B-licence (50 jumps). Train as a British Skydiving Instructor under an Examiner at an approved centre. BPA/BS Tandem rating requires B-licence minimum and significant experience as a Formation Skydiving Coach.
- Australia (APF): Earn APF A through E licences. APF Tandem Instructor certification requires APF E-licence, 500+ jumps, approved tandem system endorsement. Multi-DZ operators like Experience Co run their own training pipelines.
The full journey from first jump to tandem instructor typically takes 2–5 years, costs £10,000–$20,000 USD in training, and requires 500–1,000+ jumps. The most competitive candidates enter with additional ratings: AFFI (to teach AFF students), video/camera qualification, and a Coach rating for load organising.
Indoor Wind Tunnel Careers
Indoor skydiving is the fastest-growing segment of the bodyflight industry. iFLY operates 80+ tunnels globally and is actively hiring flight instructors, customer service staff, STEM educators, and managers. City Skydive and Tunnel One are expanding across Europe. The key advantage for job seekers: no prior skydiving or tunnel experience is required for instructor roles. Operators provide fully paid IBA (Indoor Bodyflight Association) training programmes worth $10,000–€10,000. Requirements are typically physical fitness, strong communication skills, and the ability to coach guests ranging from 3-year-olds to competitive tunnel athletes.
Experienced tunnel flyers (IBA Level 6+) can progress to IBA World Team / competitions, become national coaches, or move into wind tunnel design and operations. The IBA controller qualification, required for management roles, typically takes 3–6 months of on-the-job training.
Parachute Manufacturing & Engineering Roles
The parachute manufacturing sector in 2026 spans commercial sport systems, military recovery systems, space re-entry parachutes, and specialised cargo delivery systems. Major employers in the US include:
- Airborne Systems (California & New Jersey) - Military, space recovery, cargo; design engineers to US DoD spec
- Performance Designs (DeLand, FL) - Sport canopies; manufacturing, QC, R&D
- Sun Path Products (Raeford, NC) - Javelin containers; ISO 9001 certified, open applications accepted
- United Parachute Technologies / Strong Enterprises (Deland, FL) - Tandem and student systems
- JYRO / NZ Aerosports (Auckland, NZ) - High-performance canopies; riggers, cutters, seamstresses
Roles include aerospace/mechanical design engineers, QC inspectors, sewing machinists, pattern cutters, supply chain buyers, regulatory compliance officers (TSO certification), and administrative/finance roles. Skydiving experience is helpful context but rarely required for manufacturing or engineering positions.
How to Apply Through DZSpotter
Every job listing on DZSpotter links directly to the employer's application process - either an external careers page, email address, or direct application portal. We do not take a cut of salaries or charge candidates to apply. All listings are moderated before going live to prevent spam and scams.
Employers: Post your role free at /jobs/post. Listings go live after a quick moderation review (typically under 24 hours). Each listing runs for 60 days and can be renewed. Featured placement (top of results, blue border) is available for a small fee.
DZSpotter is operated by Ok Try This Now! Ltd, registered in England and Wales. For questions about job listings contact info@dzspotter.com.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I become a skydiving instructor?
To become a tandem skydiving instructor in the US you need a USPA A-licence, a minimum of 500 total skydives, a USPA Coach rating, and then complete a USPA Tandem Instructor Course (UPT Sigma or Strong). In the UK the route is through British Skydiving: B-licence minimum, then an Instructor Course run by a British Skydiving Examiner. In Australia the APF Tandem Instructor rating requires 500 jumps and APF E-licence. The full process typically takes 2–5 years from your first jump.
How much does a tandem skydiving instructor earn?
Tandem instructor pay is most commonly per-jump, ranging from $30–$60 USD per tandem in the United States, with experienced instructors completing 10–20 tandems per day at busy DZs. Full-time instructors at large operators (Skydive Arizona, Skydive Perris) with benefits packages earn $60,000–$100,000+ per year. In the UK salaried instructor roles are more common, typically £28,000–£45,000. In Australia salaried roles with Experience Co pay AUD $70,000–$100,000.
How many jumps do I need to become an AFF instructor?
In the US, a USPA Accelerated Freefall Instructor (AFFI) rating requires: D-licence (200 jumps minimum, typically 500+), USPA Coach rating, 3 years of active jumping, and attendance at an AFFI course. Most applicants have 500–1,000+ jumps before applying. In the UK, British Skydiving AFF Instructor requires a C or D licence and experience as a Formation Skydiving Coach first.
What qualifications do I need to be a jump pilot?
In the US, most jump pilot roles require an FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate with instrument rating, and a minimum of 500–1,500 total flight hours depending on the aircraft type. Twin Otter captains need DHC-6 type rating and typically 1,500+ hours. In Europe, an EASA CPL is required. In Australia, a CASA CPL is needed. Prior skydiving experience or drop-zone familiarity is highly valued but not always required.
What is the salary of a parachute rigger?
In the United States, FAA Senior Riggers at busy dropzones earn $45,000–$80,000 per year depending on experience and specialisation (tandem rigs vs. student rigs vs. military). Entry-level packer roles start at $15–$20/hour and can progress to full rigging certification. Riggers with Sigma tandem authorisation typically earn 20–30% more. The FAA Senior Rigger certificate requires 3 months of practical packing experience and a written + oral practical exam.
Do I need skydiving experience to work at a dropzone?
No - many roles require no skydiving experience at all. Manifest staff, restaurant and hospitality roles, marketing coordinators, ground crew, A&P mechanics, and reception staff are hired purely on their professional skills. However, enthusiasm for the sport and willingness to learn the culture makes candidates significantly more competitive.
How do I become a wind tunnel instructor?
Wind tunnel instructors (indoor skydiving coaches) are trained entirely by the operator - no prior skydiving experience is required. iFLY provides a fully paid IBA (Indoor Bodyflight Association) training programme. City Skydive in Europe offers a €10,000 internal training programme. The role requires good communication, physical fitness, and the ability to coach guests of all ages. Salaries in the UK range from £26,500–£36,500, and in the US $20/hour and up.
What jobs exist in parachute manufacturing?
The parachute manufacturing sector includes design engineers (aerospace/mechanical engineering background), quality control inspectors, sewing machinists and seamstresses, supply chain buyers, and administrative roles. Major employers include Airborne Systems (military/space recovery), Performance Designs (sport canopies, DeLand FL), Sun Path Products (Javelin containers), United Parachute Technologies (UPT, tandem systems), and Icarus Canopies. Most roles do not require skydiving experience.
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