You Can’t Hire Your Way Out of a 60,000-Technician Shortage. But You Can Out-Produce It.

By Jenny Budwig

April 30, 2026

You Can’t Hire Your Way Out of a 60,000-Technician Shortage. But You Can Out-Produce It.

Tackling a Looming Aviation Maintenance Technician Shortage and Why Digitizing Aircraft Records Is Your Most Underutilized Productivity Lever

Aviation Technician Shortage
The aviation maintenance industry is staring down a workforce crisis — and the answer isn’t more recruiting.

McKinsey‘s latest analysis projects a global shortage of roughly 60,000 AMTs by 2029. Wages are already up more than 20 percent since 2019. Pipelines are strained. And most MROs are still looking for solutions in the wrong places.

Here’s what the data actually shows: the capacity to close more than 80 percent of that projected shortage already exists inside your current workforce. The constraint isn’t headcount. It’s productivity.

The Wrench Time Problem

McKinsey measured something called “wrench time” — the share of a technician’s shift spent on actual hands-on maintenance work. Industry-wide, it ranges from 15 to 45 percent. In some line maintenance environments, it drops below 20 percent.

That means in some operations, your most skilled, hardest-to-replace people are spending less than a fifth of their day actually turning wrenches. The rest disappears into waiting — for information, for approvals, for someone to track down a logbook entry from three operators ago.

These technicians spent years training for this work. They’re not doing it nearly enough.

That gap between 20 and 45 percent wrench time isn’t a hiring problem. It’s an operational one — and a significant chunk of it lives in the records room.

McKinsey identifies digital and AI adoption as one of the three primary levers for closing it, with the potential to unlock 15 to 35 percent more productive capacity from your existing team. No new headcount. Just better use of the people you already have.

What Silver Air Figured Out

Silver Air Private Jets didn’t digitize their aircraft records as a long-term investment. They did it because paper was costing them money in real, measurable ways.

Silver Air’s revenue depends on speed — specifically, how fast a newly acquired aircraft can clear conformity and enter charter service. Every extra day it sits in the hangar is a flight that didn’t happen.

As John Ishaq, VP of Technical Operations and Director of Maintenance, put it: “Every extra day an aircraft sits in conformity is revenue we’re not seeing. Bluetail doesn’t just save time — it directly impacts our bottom line.”

The problem got acute when Silver Air started onboarding aircraft maintained overseas. Records from operators in China and Singapore came with different organizational logic, different conventions, sometimes different languages. Manually sorting and cross-referencing that documentation for FAA conformity submissions was exactly the kind of productivity-killing work McKinsey’s report flags.

“When we first started pulling records on aircraft that had been maintained overseas, we quickly realized that paper was not going to scale,” said Ava Troiani, Project Manager at Silver Air.

After deploying Bluetail, Silver Air replaced that manual process with a fully searchable digital system. The outcome wasn’t just cleaner records — it was a faster path from acquisition to revenue, and a compliance posture they could actually defend in front of the FSDO.

“The ability to search through an aircraft’s entire record history in minutes rather than digging through binders for weeks has changed the pace at which we work.” — Ava Troiani

Records Are the Foundation for Everything Else

Here’s where it gets strategic. McKinsey is explicit about what separates operators who can actually realize AI’s productivity potential from those stuck running endless pilot programs: structured, high-quality data.

Secure access to records, manuals, findings, and parts data — tightly integrated with maintenance systems — is the prerequisite for AI that works inside your workflow, not just alongside it.

That means if your records are still living in binders, PDFs scattered across shared drives, or banker’s boxes in a back room, you’re not ready to build on AI. There’s no foundation there.

Bluetail’s AI-powered logbook digitization converts physical records into searchable, structured data — making it possible to surface compliance gaps, flag missing entries, and pull full aircraft history in seconds. For a Director of Maintenance managing a mixed fleet under audit pressure, that’s not a nice-to-have. That’s operational infrastructure.

The Audit Angle

There’s a less-discussed benefit here that doesn’t show up in productivity charts: regulatory readiness.

Silver Air found that digitized records didn’t just speed up their internal workflows — they showed up prepared during FSDO audits. The difference between a team that can pull any record in 30 seconds and one that spends the first two hours of an audit locating paperwork is not subtle. For Part 135 operators, compliance isn’t a back-office function. It’s what determines whether your aircraft fly.

The Shortage Is Already Here

McKinsey projects the AMT shortfall at roughly 22,000 full-time employees by the end of 2026 — a number expected to nearly triple over the following three years.

MROs are responding the only way they know how: higher wages, training partnerships, aggressive recruiting. All of that matters. But the organizations that come out ahead won’t just be the ones winning the talent war. They’ll be the ones getting more out of the team they already have.

And that starts with making sure your technicians aren’t burning an hour every shift hunting for maintenance history that should be searchable in seconds.

Digitized, AI-ready records aren’t a technology upgrade. They’re a workforce multiplier. In a market where you can’t hire your way out of a 60,000-technician shortfall, every percentage point of wrench time you recover is a competitive advantage.


Ready to see how Bluetail is helping operators like Silver Air turn records management into a productivity advantage? Book a demo.

Sources: McKinsey & Company, “Addressing the Shortage of Aviation Maintenance Technicians” (2026); Silver Air / Bluetail case study, as reported by DOM Magazine and Corporate Jet Investor.

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