Part 108 Readiness Assessment

A scored answer to one question: if you had to apply tomorrow, what would stop you?

The Part 108 NPRM proposes an organizational bar: a system that prevents unauthorized release, surfaces exceptions before launch, and proves afterward what was authorized. Most waiver-era programs have the flying down and the record scattered. The assessment finds every gap between your records and the proposed requirements, and gives you the templates and sequence to close them while you keep flying under your current authority.

What you get

Scored gap analysis.

Every NPRM-mapped requirement evaluated against your actual program: training and currency records, airworthiness and configuration history, procedures, reporting, dispatch discipline. Each finding cites the proposed regulation behind it. Scored, not vibes.

Evidence templates.

The record structures an application will draw on, built to your operation. These are the same structures Ledger maintains continuously, so nothing you build is throwaway.

Dual-track roadmap.

A sequenced plan: what to fix first, what your waiver renewal timeline requires, and how the record compounds so the transition happens on your schedule instead of the FAA's.

How it runs

Week 0.

A 25-minute call. We map your waiver portfolio, expiration dates, record-keeping state, and customer pressure. If the assessment fits, you get a fixed quote on the call.

Week 1.

You provide a defined input set by an agreed date. We score.

Weeks 2-3.

Findings review, templates delivered, roadmap walked through live.

Terms

Fixed scope, defined in writing before we start. From $9,500 depending on program size. Half upfront. Two to three weeks from receipt of your inputs. Anything outside the defined scope is a separately priced phase two, and we'll tell you so before doing it.

What happens after

The final section of your report prices what maintaining this record costs you manually per month, next to what Ledger's shadow mode costs to run the same checks continuously. Most operators convert. None are obligated to.