CPA Polo Shirts

The working uniform of contract pilots—and a quiet conversation starter

Contract pilots dress business casual because the job demands it. Owners expect professional. Operations demand practical. The polo shirt has become the everyday uniform of contract flying—and CPA polos are built specifically for that reality.

Your uniform has to work as hard as you do.

Both as a uniform and as a conversation starter.

Built to be worn. Built to be noticed—subtly.

CPA polos are designed for the cockpit.

They keep you comfortable in the cockpit and on the ramp, sharp in front of owners, and presentable in the places where contract work actually happens—FBO lobbies, crew rooms, and chance conversations that turn into phone calls later.

The result is a shirt that does two jobs at once: it functions as a true work uniform and quietly signals that you’re a professional contract pilot, available to be hired.

Designed for real pilot life

Cool in summer
Lightweight, breathable fabric keeps you comfortable during long days, hot ramps, and even the greenhouse effect of the cockpit.

Moisture-wicking
Manages heat and sweat so you always look composed.

Always sharp
Structured enough for owner-facing trips, without feeling stiff or overdone.

No ironing required
Pull it from your bag, hang it in the hotel, put it on. It holds its shape and looks great.

Always ready
Keep one in your bag for that pop-up trip.

Travel-ready by design
It happens—your trip gets extended by a day or two. These polos can be washed in a hotel sink if needed. Hang overnight. Ready in the morning.

Why this matters.
  • Contract pilots don’t rely on job boards.
  • They get hired through reputation, visibility, and timing.
  • A clean, professional polo with a subtle CPA mark gives people a reason to ask a question—and those conversations are often how the next trip starts.
Subtle, professional branding

The CPA logo is intentionally understated. It signals professionalism and affiliation without shouting for attention—appropriate for owner meetings, FBO lobbies, and first impressions.