AFZ and AZF both refer to the highest-level German radio communication certificate required for certain types of flying within German airspace. These acronyms are used interchangeably:
The abbreviation may differ depending on the document source (e.g. EASA vs. LBA), but they denote the same qualification.
The AFZ/AZF is mandatory for pilots who:
The AZF/AFZ exam covers:
The exam includes:
Certificate | Scope | Language | Use |
---|---|---|---|
BFZ/BZF | National certificate for VFR flights in uncontrolled airspace | German | Basic private flying |
EFZ/EZF | Extended VFR certificate for controlled airspace | German | VFR in controlled airspace |
AFZ/AZF | Full radiotelephony certificate | German + English | VFR and IFR in all airspace |
The AFZ/AZF certificate does not expire. However, language proficiency, especially in English, must be revalidated according to ICAO language level requirements (usually every 4 to 6 years, depending on the level achieved).
Holding an AFZ means a pilot is fully certified for all radiotelephony communication required in German and international airspace, including complex IFR scenarios and multilingual operations.