John Travolta completed his yearly Boeing 737 check ride this week, keeping a certification streak alive that most professional pilots would genuinely respect.
The 72-year-old actor announced the news on Instagram with a short caption: “Yearly check ride on the 737!” The post drew over 87,500 likes, a strong response for a quiet one-sentence aviation update.
A Boeing 737 check ride is a formal regulatory re-certification test. Pilots with a commercial type rating on a specific aircraft have to pass one every year. That’s what keeps the rating active. The test covers instrument procedures, emergency scenarios, aircraft systems, and in-flight decision making. An FAA-designated examiner or airline check airman evaluates the result. Experience doesn’t grant exceptions. You show up prepared, or you don’t pass.
Travolta has held active pilot certifications throughout his acting career. He’s one of the few Hollywood names to maintain real commercial credentials. He’s known to have flown Boeing 707s, 727s, and Gulfstreams over the years. For a stretch, he famously kept a Boeing 707 at his home at Jumbolair in Ocala, Florida, a private residential airpark with direct aircraft taxiway access. He earned his pilot’s license as a young man. Flying came first.
Most people know Travolta for Saturday Night Fever, Grease, and his career-defining comeback in Pulp Fiction. The aviation side of his life tends to stay quieter. He doesn’t make a lot of noise about it, and it rarely comes up in the usual celebrity coverage cycle. But the record is there. He’s built a flying resume that holds up in any professional cockpit. The Boeing 737 type rating he just renewed is the same certification commercial airline pilots carry.
At 72, keeping that credential active is worth pausing on. Most people holding an active 737 type rating at that age are still working airline pilots. Travolta maintains his without that professional obligation. The preparation is real, the standards are consistent for everyone, and you either pass or your type rating lapses.
Travolta has been open about how much flying means to him throughout his career. Aviation comes up regularly in his interviews, and he’s always treated it as a serious pursuit. That quiet commitment shows up every year. He does the preparation and sits down with the examiner. He keeps showing up even without a professional reason to. That says something.
Stories like this one are worth a little appreciation. There’s a 72-year-old actor who could reasonably step back from all of it. Instead, he’s staying current on a commercial aircraft type year after year. He’s doing the work that most people half his age wouldn’t bother with. He posted a short update on Instagram and moved on. That’s probably exactly how he’d want it. Here’s hoping he’s still clearing yearly check rides at 82.
