General aviation aircraft above a mountain landscape
Electronic Flight Bag field guide · updated July 2026

Choose an EFB around the way you actually fly.

Compare the tradeoffs, explore cross-platform and AI-assisted workflows, and see how Fly Overhead approaches pilot trust for GA pilots, students, and instructors.

One category, several very different decisions.

An Electronic Flight Bag is part chart library, part weather desk, part route planner, and part cockpit habit. The best choice depends on your devices, aircraft, training environment, avionics, budget, and comfort with automation.

This guide separates those decisions into focused paths. The comparison pages are candid about competitor strengths. The audience guides explain where AI can help and where a pilot or instructor must remain firmly in control.

Judge any EFB on the complete flight loop.

A feature list matters less than whether the workflow remains clear from planning through postflight review.

  1. 01 · Prepare

    Current source data

    Charts, weather, NOTAMs, TFRs, terrain, and aircraft context should be current and inspectable.

  2. 02 · Decide

    Pilot judgment

    The product should support a decision without pretending to become the decision-maker.

  3. 03 · Operate

    Cockpit discipline

    Information must remain readable and advisory while the pilot keeps attention outside and on required equipment.

  4. 04 · Learn

    Useful retention

    A good debrief preserves the lesson, corrects the record, and improves the next flight.

General aviation cockpit above the landscape
See it in practice

Try one complete flight workflow.

Plan the route, inspect the brief, use the chart, and review the debrief. The product should earn its place in your flight bag.