Join CAP
Joining Civil Air Patrol offers a unique opportunity to serve your community, save lives, and shape futures. Members come from diverse backgrounds and bring a wide variety of experience and skills to the organization.
Professional and personal development opportunities contribute to the success of members, allowing them to explore all that Civil Air Patrol has to offer, and can help advance professional aspirations while volunteering.
Youth aged 12-18 may join the cadet program, which focuses on four elements: leadership, aerospace education, physical fitness, and character development. Civil Air Patrol follows Air Force values, customs, courtesies, and traditions, but there is no military obligation for either cadets or adult members.
Individuals 18 and older can join as adult members.
Adult Members (18+)
Civil Air Patrol adult members come from all walks of life. A military background is not required, nor do you need to be a pilot. Some members choose to get involved with aviation-related missions such as search and rescue or taking cadets on orientation flights, but there is a role for everyone in CAP.
For local units to function, volunteers are needed to fill leadership roles as well as staff positions in personnel, transportation, operations, recruiting, safety, finance, and other areas.
Whatever their role, Civil Air Patrol volunteers make a positive impact on their community and may serve as leaders and role models for our cadets. Local and national training programs enable members to gain new skills and serve in various CAP positions.
Youth Members (12-18)
Youth from 12-18 may join Civil Air Patrol’s cadet program. Cadets learn about aviation and develop leadership and teamwork skills valuable in becoming responsible adults. The year-round program typically includes a two-to-three-hour squadron meeting each week, one Saturday event every four to eight weeks, and one seven-to-10-day encampment each year, usually in the summer.
While school and family obligations take priority, this engaging program transforms youth into dynamic citizens and community leaders through a curriculum that encourages cadets to learn to lead as they progress. Many of the nation's astronauts, pilots, engineers, scientists, and business leaders first explored their careers through Civil Air Patrol.
Patron Members
Adults who wish to remain inactive, but want to be associated with Civil Air Patrol, can show support financially by paying annual dues as patron members. Patrons do not participate in CAP activities or meetings but may be invited to attend squadron social functions.
CAP Alumni
Nearly 1 million members have served in Civil Air Patrol since its founding in 1941. If you are one of them, connect with other alumni members at alumni@gocivilairpatrol.org.
Civil Air Patrol’s adult volunteers support programs and accomplish missions as well as contribute to the operation of individual units by holding a variety of duty positions. Some take leadership roles as squadron commanders. Others focus on more specific responsibilities with a wide range of options, including communications, emergency services, finance, logistics, marketing, personnel, and transportation.
Some adult volunteers choose to focus their contributions on the cadet program, providing guidance and serving as a positive role model. It is common for parents of cadets to choose this path in Civil Air Patrol, though many ultimately expand their area of responsibility within their squadrons to take on roles outside the cadet program.
Many Ways to Serve
Opportunities to serve are boundless. Some members are interested in aviation and choose to serve on aircrews — as a pilot, observer, scanner, or airborne photographer — but that is just one aspect of Civil Air Patrol. To function effectively, CAP also needs educators, lawyers, IT professionals, chaplains, drivers, administrative professionals, and more. Whatever your background or experience, there is a role for you in Civil Air Patrol.
Real-World Missions
Civil Air Patrol conducts a variety of emergency services and humanitarian missions, including search and rescue, disaster relief, ground and airborne photography, HF/VHF communications support, remote aircraft escort and training, and aerial support for special events. Members must become qualified to participate in or provide operations support for missions.
Aviators
Civil Air Patrol operates the world’s largest fleet of single‐engine piston aircraft. Volunteering as a pilot is an excellent way to remain current and work on an advanced rating while giving back to the community though aviation. Flying CAP aircraft to maintain currency is much less expensive than renting a comparable aircraft.
Depending on experience, members can quickly move from VFR pilot to transport pilot to orientation pilot, allowing them to give cadets orientation flights, and then ultimately to mission pilot. Mission pilots may fly search and rescue missions and participate in disaster relief efforts, and many participate in other types of missions tasked to Civil Air Patrol.
CAP also has thousands of small Unmanned Aerial Systems (sUAS) and needs remote pilots with a Federal Aviation Administration Part 107 certificate to work in the sUAS program. Training is offered for those who are working on FAA certification.
How to Join
Here are the steps to join CAP as an adult member:
Step 1
Find a local CAP squadron. There may be more than one near you.
Step 2
Contact the squadron and arrange to visit a meeting. Visit more than one squadron if you wish.
Step 3
After the squadron commander and membership review board approve your membership, complete the membership application and FD 258 fingerprint card (available at your squadron).
Step 4
Submit your application, fingerprint card, and dues as directed by your squadron.
Some of the requirements to become an adult member of Civil Air Patrol are:
- Be at least 18 years of age.
- Be a citizen of the United States or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence. (A lawfully admitted noncitizen residing in the U.S. may have this waived by National Headquarters.)
- Be accepted by the membership board of the Civil Air Patrol unit you are joining.
- If former military, you must have been discharged under honorable conditions.
- Complete an FBI criminal background check.
- Have no felony convictions.
CAP Alumni
Nearly 1 million members have served in Civil Air Patrol since its founding in 1941. If you are one of them, connect with other alumni members at alumni@gocivilairpatrol.org.