Start on the web
Use free METAR / TAF, E6B, fuel, crosswind, and unit tools before installing anything.
iFly EFB Alternative
Choose iFly EFB when your main requirement is a mature U.S.-focused EFB with charts, synthetic vision, and Windows / tablet support. Choose Pilot Kit when you want free web weather and E6B tools, a free app, and one cross-device stack for map review, logbook, checklists, aircraft profiles, and cloud sync.
Start from the free web tools, continue in the free app, and only move to paid tiers when sync, exports, or deeper workflow layers become real requirements.
Use free METAR / TAF, E6B, fuel, crosswind, and unit tools before installing anything.
Download the free app for map review, logbook, checklists, aircraft profiles, and everyday flying workflow.
Turn on Pro later if cloud sync, exports, and deeper cross-device workflow are worth paying for.
These are the comparison points that usually settle the decision fastest between Pilot Kit and iFly EFB.
| Decision factor | Pilot Kit | iFly EFB |
|---|---|---|
| Platform coverage | iOS, Android, HarmonyOS, and web | Apple, Android, and Windows |
| Getting started | Free web tools plus free app | 30-day free trial, then paid subscription |
| Individual pricing | Free, Plus $99.99/year, Pro $149.99/year | Base annual subscription plus add-ons for IFR or multi-platform use |
| Best-known strength | Broader app-plus-web workflow with records and sync | U.S.-focused EFB with charts, synthetic vision, and device options |
Both products help pilots with map and flight-prep workflow, but the center of gravity differs. iFly EFB starts from a traditional EFB subscription around charting and in-flight navigation. Pilot Kit starts from a free entry path and a broader workflow that extends well beyond the map alone.
Pilot Kit is the better fit when you want users to start on free tools, then move into the free app, and only later pay for sync and deeper workflow features.
iFly EFB remains stronger when your decision is mainly about charting, synthetic vision, U.S. procedures, and a paid EFB workflow that already includes Windows device support.
Pilot Kit and iFly EFB overlap on maps and pilot prep, but they differ sharply on free entry, pricing structure, and whether the product also covers records, checklists, aircraft workflow, and sync in the same stack.
| Topic | Pilot Kit | iFly EFB |
|---|---|---|
| Public web weather and calculators | Yes | No comparable public browser entry point |
| Free plan | Yes | Trial first, then paid |
| Windows support | Web workflow instead of native Windows EFB app | Yes |
| Logbook, checklists, aircraft workflow | Integrated and expanding | Not the center of the product story |
| Best fit | Pilots who want one broader tool stack | Pilots who want a traditional U.S. EFB workflow |
These are the practical questions pilots usually ask when comparing a paid EFB subscription with a broader free-entry pilot workflow.
More comparisons
If this is not the only product on your shortlist, open the other comparison pages and line up pricing, platform coverage, and workflow depth side by side.
See how Pilot Kit compares with ForeFlight on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
See how Pilot Kit compares with Garmin Pilot on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
See how Pilot Kit compares with MyFlightbook on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
See how Pilot Kit compares with LogTen Pro on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
See how Pilot Kit compares with FltPlan Go on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
See how Pilot Kit compares with SkyDemon on pricing, platform coverage, and workflow fit.
Pilot Kit
Open the weather and calculator tools first if you want to validate Pilot Kit before any subscription decision. Then compare plans when you know whether you need a wider cross-device workflow or a more traditional paid EFB.