Start on the web
Use free METAR / TAF, E6B, fuel, crosswind, and unit tools before installing anything.
MyFlightbook Alternative
Choose MyFlightbook when your main goal is a free or low-cost logbook with strong community roots and you do not need an integrated map, weather, or E6B workflow. Choose Pilot Kit when you want a digital logbook, but also need weather lookup, E6B, route review, checklists, aircraft profiles, and cloud sync in one product family.
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.
This comparison usually comes down to whether you only need logbook workflow or want a wider pilot toolkit around the logbook.
| Decision factor | Pilot Kit | MyFlightbook |
|---|---|---|
| Product scope | Pilot toolkit with logbook, weather, map, checklists, and E6B | Logbook-first product with supporting pilot record tools |
| Starting point | Free web tools plus free app | Free core logbook, optional paid support / premium features |
| Weather and E6B | Built-in web and app tools | Not the main product focus |
| Best-known strength | One workflow across app, web tools, and dashboard | Free logbook entry and long-running pilot community |
Pilot Kit and MyFlightbook are not solving the same full problem. MyFlightbook is strongest as a logbook-first choice. Pilot Kit is stronger when the logbook is only one part of a larger flying workflow.
Pilot Kit is better when you want the logbook connected to weather, map review, E6B, aircraft setup, checklists, and cloud sync instead of managing each tool separately.
MyFlightbook remains attractive when the central problem is pilot logging itself and you are comfortable pairing it with other apps for weather, planning, or calculation.
The biggest difference is not price alone. It is whether you are buying a logbook tool or a broader flying workflow with logging built in.
| Topic | Pilot Kit | MyFlightbook |
|---|---|---|
| Free entry | Yes, plus free browser tools | Yes, free core logbook |
| Weather and E6B workflow | Built in | Limited / external to the main product |
| Map and procedure review | Airports, airways, waypoints, SID / STAR / IAP, AIP, and layers | Not a primary strength |
| Logbook specialization | Integrated into a wider pilot toolkit | More focused on record-keeping itself |
| Cross-device stack | App, landing tools, and dashboard | Web plus mobile logbook workflow |
| Best fit | Pilots who want one product family for flying tasks | Pilots who mainly want a free or low-cost digital logbook |
These are the questions pilots usually ask when deciding between a free logbook-first tool and a broader pilot toolkit.
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.
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Pilot Kit
Open the free weather and calculator tools first if you want to see how Pilot Kit works beyond the logbook. Then compare plans when you know whether you only need record-keeping or a wider cross-device flying workflow.