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Comparisons

LogTen Pro Alternative: An Honest Comparison for Pilots

Guillaume Huchet · · Updated May 7, 2026 · 13 min read

Table of contents
  1. Quick Answer
  2. What We’re Comparing
  3. Feature-by-Feature Comparison
  4. What LogTen Pro Does Well
  5. Where LogTen Pro Falls Short
  6. Where Skyden Fits In
  7. Other Alternatives Worth Knowing
  8. Who Should Choose What
  9. How to Switch from LogTen to Skyden
  10. Frequently Asked Questions
  11. The Bottom Line
  12. Related reading

LogTen Pro is the most popular pilot logbook app on the market. With 160,000+ active pilots, 10,000+ five-star reviews across app stores, and features like one-tap entry creation and a crew schedule importer covering 100+ schedule formats, it earned that position. If you’re an airline pilot on Apple devices and budget isn’t a concern, LogTen Pro is a genuinely strong choice.

But not every pilot needs what LogTen Pro offers. And at $129.99/year for the Pro tier, not every pilot wants to pay for it either.

Maybe you fly under authorities beyond FAA and EASA. Maybe you don’t need career job matching or airline roster import. Maybe you just want a clean, reliable logbook without paying premium prices for features you’ll never touch.

This guide compares LogTen Pro against dedicated alternatives, with honest assessments of strengths and limitations on every side. If you’re considering a switch, or wondering if there’s a better fit for your flying, here’s the full picture.

Quick Answer

LogTen Pro is best for airline pilots on Apple devices who want maximum automation and career features. If you fly for a major airline, use schedule import daily, and value the ALPA partnership, LogTen Pro earns its price. But if you fly under multiple authorities, don’t need airline-specific features, or want all features without paying $129.99/year, there are strong alternatives that cost less and cover more regulatory ground.

What We’re Comparing

LogTen Pro is a pilot logbook app for iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and Apple Watch. It’s published by Coradine and has been on the market for over a decade. Pricing starts free (50 hours), then $79.99/year for Basic or $129.99/year for Pro. The Pro tier unlocks airline schedule import, the Mac app, and additional features.

Skyden is a dedicated pilot logbook for iOS, iPadOS, and macOS. EUR 79.99/year gets every feature with no tiered pricing. It supports PDF export in 7 authority formats and import from 8 logbook sources including LogTen. Free tier includes 20 hours with all features unlocked.

Other alternatives covered briefly: Wingman (cross-platform, $59/year), MyFlightbook (free, donation-supported), CrewLounge PILOTLOG (60 data fields, EUR 39.99-46.99/year), Logger (cheapest paid plan at $29.99/year), and FlyLog (broadest platform support).

Feature-by-Feature Comparison

FeatureLogTen ProSkydenWingmanMyFlightbook
Annual price$79.99 (Basic) / $129.99 (Pro)EUR 79.99$59Free
Pricing tiersFree / Basic / ProFree / Pro (all features)Free / ProFree only
iOSYesYesYesYes
AndroidNoNoYesYes
Web appNoNoYesYes
macOSYes (Pro only)YesNoYes (web)
Authority formatsFAA + EASA7 (EASA, FAA, TCCA, UK CAA, JCAB, GCAA, CASA)LimitedLimited
Auto-loggingOne-tap entry + schedule importSmart autofillRoster importManual
Airline roster import100+ schedule formats5 European airlinesMany airlines (auto-import)No
Career/job matchingYes (ALPA partnership)NoNoNo
Digital signaturesYesYesNoNo
Logbook import sourcesCSV8 sources (incl. LogTen)CSVCSV
Airline data importSchedule-based5 airlines (ASL Airlines, British Airways EuroFlyer, easyJet, Ryanair, Volotea)Schedule-basedNo
Offline modeYesYesYesYes
Free tier50 hours20 hours250 hoursUnlimited

The biggest differences come down to three areas: automation depth, authority coverage, and pricing structure. LogTen Pro leads on automation. Skyden leads on regulatory breadth. Wingman leads on cross-platform access and free tier generosity.

What LogTen Pro Does Well

Credit where it’s due. LogTen Pro earned its market position through genuine product strengths, not just marketing.

One-tap entry creation. LogTen prefills the current time, GPS location, and your default aircraft with a single tap, so creating a fresh entry takes seconds. Combined with the airline schedule importer, airline pilots flying 80+ sectors a month can keep their logbook current with very little manual work.

Airline schedule import covering 100+ schedule formats. Spanning major US and international carriers. Import your roster and your flights are pre-populated. If you fly for a supported airline, this alone can justify the subscription.

Career features and ALPA partnership. LogTen Pro includes job matching through its ALPA partnership, helping pilots identify career opportunities based on their logged hours and qualifications. No other logbook app offers this.

Deep Apple ecosystem integration. LogTen runs on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple Watch. The experience across devices is polished. Data syncs seamlessly. For pilots fully invested in Apple hardware, the integration is excellent.

Market trust and community. 160,000+ active pilots and 10,000+ five-star reviews across app stores create a network effect. When you walk into an airline interview with a LogTen printout, examiners recognize it. There’s value in using the tool that most of your colleagues use.

Where LogTen Pro Falls Short

No product is perfect. LogTen Pro has limitations that matter more to some pilots than others.

The Pro tier at $129.99/year is expensive. Over a 30-year career, that’s nearly $3,900 just for a logbook. The Basic tier at $79.99/year is more affordable but locks out key features. Want the Mac app? Pro only. Want airline schedule import? Pro only. The tiered pricing means you’re often paying for the full package or missing features you need.

Only FAA and EASA formats. If you hold licenses under TCCA (Canada), UK CAA, JCAB (Japan), GCAA (UAE), or CASA (Australia), LogTen can’t generate compliant PDF exports for those authorities. You’ll need to reformat manually. For pilots flying international contracts or holding multiple licenses, this is a significant gap.

Apple-only with no escape path. LogTen runs exclusively on Apple devices. No Android app. No web interface. If you switch to an Android phone or tablet, your logbook doesn’t come with you. In a world where pilots increasingly use mixed device ecosystems, platform lock-in is a real risk.

Pricing history has frustrated long-time users. Pilots who purchased earlier versions of LogTen found themselves paying again when the app moved to a subscription model. Forum threads on Pilots of America are full of users who feel they’ve paid multiple times for the same core product. The current model is clear, but the transition left a trust deficit with some pilots.

Can feel over-engineered for non-airline pilots. If you’re a GA pilot, flight instructor, or weekend flyer, many of LogTen’s headline features (airline schedule import, career job matching, ALPA partnership) simply don’t apply to you. You’re paying for features built for a different audience.

Where Skyden Fits In

Skyden takes a different approach: built around protecting your hours, an enjoyable daily experience, and tools to share your flying story.

Reliable hour protection. Every flight is automatically backed up so nothing gets lost, and your hours stay safe across devices. For pilots whose career record is the single most important file they own, this comes first.

Enjoyable to use day to day. Smart autofill handles aircraft, airports, and times so flight entry takes seconds. Offline-first architecture means logging works at 35,000 feet with no connection. The interface is built around speed and clarity, the small UX details that make daily use pleasant rather than tedious.

Built to share your journey. Shareable flight cards (route, time, distance) let pilots share their flying with friends and crew. Digital signatures so captains can sign your flights without chasing paper. The kind of tool that helps pilots celebrate the work they are proud of and build their career record over time.

One price, all features. EUR 79.99/year unlocks everything. No Basic vs Pro split. No features locked behind a higher tier. Digital signatures, certificate management, analytics, all authority formats (EASA, FAA, TCCA, UK CAA, JCAB, GCAA, CASA), all import sources. One subscription gets it all.

Direct LogTen import. Skyden supports LogTen’s TSV export format natively. Export from LogTen, import into Skyden, and your flight history transfers with field mapping handled automatically. No spreadsheet wrangling required. We also support import from ForeFlight, PILOTLOG, FlyLog, Carnet.aero, FlightLog, Swift, and generic CSV. For a full walkthrough, see our import guide.

Honest limitations. Skyden’s airline roster import covers 5 European airlines (ASL Airlines, British Airways EuroFlyer, easyJet, Ryanair, Volotea), narrower than LogTen’s 100+. It doesn’t have career job matching. It has a smaller user base than LogTen. The free tier is 20 hours, more modest than LogTen’s 50 or Wingman’s 250. If broad airline-specific automation is your top priority, LogTen Pro is the better tool for you.

Other Alternatives Worth Knowing

Wingman: Best Cross-Platform Option

Wingman runs on iOS, Android, and web, giving it broad platform support. At $59/year with a 250-hour free tier, it’s one of the most affordable premium options. Automatic roster import covers many airlines. If you need Android support or want a cheap premium subscription, Wingman deserves a look.

Limitations: Smaller community than LogTen. Primarily airline-focused. Their marketing tends toward self-serving comparisons.

MyFlightbook: Best Free Option

Completely free, forever. Cross-platform. Open API. Running for 15+ years. If budget is your absolute top priority and you can live with a dated interface, MyFlightbook is the obvious choice.

Limitations: The UI hasn’t been modernized. It’s a one-person project with sustainability questions. Limited support.

CrewLounge PILOTLOG: Most Data Fields

60 data fields per flight, 150+ reports, 40,000+ airports. For pilots who want maximum logging granularity across platforms (iOS, Android, Windows, macOS), CrewLounge offers depth that no other app matches.

Limitations: Complex interface. Confusing pricing tiers. The rebrand from MCC Pilot Log left some users feeling burned over lifetime license changes.

Logger: Cheapest Paid Plan

Logger from getlogger.com is the cheapest serious pilot logbook on the market at $29.99/year for unlimited logging, with 50 free flights to start. Both tiers share the same feature set: ADS-B import, automatic airline importers, digital signatures, certificate tracking, and limit templates for EASA, FAA, CASA, and TCA. Apple-only (iPhone, iPad, Mac).

Limitations: No Android, no web. Smaller user base and shorter track record than incumbents. Aggressive pricing raises long-term sustainability questions.

Who Should Choose What

Stay with LogTen Pro if you’re an airline pilot who actively uses schedule import from a supported airline, you value LogTen’s automation, and the ALPA career features matter to your job search. LogTen’s automation is best-in-class for airline operations. If you fly for American, Delta, or another major carrier and log 80+ flights a month, the time savings justify the premium.

Choose Skyden if you want a logbook that protects your hours above all, feels enjoyable to use day to day, and gives you tools to share your flying journey. Single tier, every feature unlocked, on Apple devices. Broad multi-authority PDF support is included as a bonus rather than the headline.

Choose Wingman if you need Android or web access, you want the most generous free tier (250 hours), or you’re looking for the cheapest premium subscription. Cross-platform support is Wingman’s strongest card.

Choose MyFlightbook if you want a free logbook and don’t mind a less polished experience. It works, it’s been around for 15+ years, and it costs nothing.

Choose Logger if you want full features at the lowest annual price on the market. At $29.99/year, it undercuts every paid competitor and includes ADS-B import, airline roster import, signatures, and certificate tracking.

How to Switch from LogTen to Skyden

If you decide to make the move, the process takes about 10 minutes.

  1. Export from LogTen. Open LogTen, go to Settings, and export your logbook as TSV. This creates a file with your complete flight history.

  2. Import into Skyden. Open Skyden, go to Import, select LogTen as the source, and pick your exported file. Field mapping is handled automatically.

  3. Verify your data. Check 10-15 entries across different time periods. Confirm total times, night hours, PIC/SIC splits, and remarks transferred correctly.

  4. Run both apps in parallel. Log flights in both Skyden and LogTen for 2-4 weeks. This gives you confidence that nothing was lost and the new app fits your workflow before you commit.

Your data stays in LogTen even after you export it. You’re copying, not moving. There’s zero risk of data loss. For a more detailed walkthrough with screenshots and troubleshooting tips, see our complete import guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is LogTen Pro worth $129.99/year?

It depends on how you fly. If you’re an airline pilot who uses schedule import daily, the automation saves enough time to justify the cost. If you’re a GA pilot, instructor, or weekend flyer who doesn’t use airline-specific features, you’re paying for capabilities you won’t touch. The Basic tier at $79.99/year is a reasonable middle ground, but it locks out the Mac app and airline imports.

Can I import my LogTen data into another app?

Yes. LogTen supports TSV export, which captures your complete flight history. Skyden imports LogTen’s TSV format directly with automatic field mapping. Most other logbook apps (Wingman, MyFlightbook, CrewLounge) also accept CSV imports. Your data in LogTen remains intact after export.

Does LogTen work on Android?

No. LogTen Pro is Apple-only (iOS, iPadOS, macOS, Apple Watch). If you need Android support, consider Wingman, MyFlightbook, CrewLounge PILOTLOG, FlyLog, or Garmin Pilot. There’s no indication that Coradine plans to release an Android version.

What logbook app supports the most authority formats?

Skyden currently supports 7 authority PDF formats: EASA, FAA, TCCA, UK CAA, JCAB, GCAA, and CASA. LogTen Pro supports FAA and EASA. Most other apps focus primarily on FAA and EASA formats with limited or no support for other authorities.

Is it safe to switch logbook apps mid-career?

Yes. CSV and TSV exports capture your complete flight history. The original data stays in your current app after export. Import into the new app’s free tier first, verify a sample of entries, and run both in parallel for a few weeks before committing. The most common issue is time format mismatches, which most apps handle during import.

The Bottom Line

LogTen Pro is a genuinely excellent product. It has the deepest automation, the largest community, and the most mature ecosystem of any pilot logbook app. For airline pilots who use its full feature set, the $129.99/year price is defensible.

But “best for airline pilots” isn’t the same as “best for every pilot.” If you fly under authorities beyond FAA and EASA, if you want all features without tiered pricing, or if you simply prefer a lighter tool without features built for someone else’s workflow, the alternatives are strong.

The right logbook is the one that fits how you actually fly, not the one with the biggest user count.

Want to see how Skyden compares for your flying? The free tier includes 20 hours with every feature unlocked, enough to evaluate it alongside LogTen and decide for yourself. And if you’re ready to migrate, Skyden imports LogTen’s TSV files directly, so your flight history comes with you.

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