Skip to main content
Flying with a friend in the same cockpit or quietly observing a busy airport from the sidelines are two of VATSIM’s most useful features. Shared cockpit lets two pilots operate the same aircraft together, while observer mode lets you watch and listen without being visible on the network.

What is Shared Cockpit

Shared cockpit allows two pilots to fly the same aircraft together on VATSIM. One pilot acts as the captain (Pilot Flying or Pilot Monitoring) while the other takes the first officer role. You share the same cockpit, the same instruments, and the same view - just like a real airline crew.This is perfect for:
  • Flying with a friend for a more realistic multi-crew experience
  • Training a new VATSIM pilot by sitting in the right seat
  • Practicing crew resource management (CRM)
  • Long-haul flights where you want company

How It Works on VATSIM

On the VATSIM network side, shared cockpit works as follows:
  1. The first pilot connects normally with the flight callsign (e.g., ACA456)
  2. The second pilot connects with the same callsign plus a letter suffix (e.g., ACA456A)
  3. The second pilot connects in observer mode - they are invisible to other users and ATC on the network
  4. Only the first pilot’s aircraft is visible on the network
  5. Only one pilot should transmit on the radio at a time
Both pilots must have valid VATSIM accounts to connect. The second pilot uses their own VATSIM CID and password but connects with the shared callsign plus the letter suffix.

Important Rules

  • Only one aircraft appears on the network - the first pilot’s
  • The second pilot is invisible to ATC and other pilots
  • Only one pilot should press PTT at a time. Coordinate who is responsible for radio communication before the flight.
  • The shared cockpit connection on VATSIM is only about network visibility. The actual cockpit synchronization happens through your simulator’s shared cockpit system (see below).

Simulator Shared Cockpit Setup

VATSIM’s shared cockpit handling and your simulator’s cockpit synchronization are two separate systems. VATSIM handles who is visible on the network. Your simulator handles syncing the actual cockpit controls, switches, instruments, and aircraft state between two computers.

MSFS Shared Cockpit Options

YourControls (Recommended)
  • Free, open-source shared cockpit solution for MSFS
  • Supports a wide range of aircraft including PMDG, Fenix, and default aircraft
  • One pilot hosts, the other connects via IP address or cloud relay
  • Syncs flight controls, switches, autopilot, FMS, and more
  • Download from github.com/Sequal32/YourControls
MSFS Built-in Multiplayer
  • MSFS has built-in group flying, but it does not provide true cockpit synchronization
  • Each pilot flies their own independent aircraft
  • Not suitable for shared cockpit - use YourControls instead
When using YourControls with VATSIM, connect to VATSIM first (both pilots), then start the YourControls session. The pilot who is visible on the network (the one without the letter suffix) should be the YourControls host.

Step-by-Step Shared Cockpit on VATSIM

1

Coordinate with your copilot

Agree on the flight plan, who will be the primary pilot on the network (visible aircraft), and who will handle radio communications. Use Discord, TeamSpeak, or another voice app for crew coordination - do not use the VATSIM frequency for inter-crew chat.
2

First pilot connects to VATSIM

The primary pilot connects to VATSIM normally using the flight callsign (e.g., ACA456). This is the visible aircraft.
3

Second pilot connects as observer

The second pilot connects using the same callsign with a letter suffix (e.g., ACA456A) in observer mode. They will be invisible on the network.
4

Start the simulator shared cockpit session

Launch YourControls, SmartCopilot, or your chosen shared cockpit tool. Connect both simulators so cockpit state is synchronized.
5

Fly together

Coordinate duties as you would in a real cockpit. One pilot flies, the other monitors and handles communications. Switch roles as desired throughout the flight.
For the best experience, use a third-party voice communication tool (like Discord) for crew coordination. Keep VATSIM radio for ATC communication only. This mimics how real crews use the intercom system separately from ATC radio.

Next Steps

Radio Phraseology

Master the standard radio calls you will hear in observer mode

Special Events

Find the best events to observe or fly in