As of 2019, the institute has four single-engine Cessna 172 aircraft, with two having a glass cockpit, and additionally a twin-engine Piper Seneca V for advanced training.[1][6] Among the total of five aircraft, a U. S.-made Cessna 172-R bought in 2014 cost ₹1.7 crore and another U. S.-made six-seat Piper Seneca V bought in the same year cost ₹6 crore. The academy has its own hangar, built at ₹4 crore, near the aircraft maintenance base at the Thiruvananthapuram International Airport, which can accommodate up to 10 trainer aircraft.[5] The commercial pilot licence (CPL) trainees will be given additional class in twin-engine aircraft as an add-on.[7]
In 2012, the government began construction of a new building complex for the academy inside the Thiruvananthapuram International Airport after the old one, including a hangar, was demolished for allocating space for construction of a new terminal and an Air India engineering base. Classes were then held outside the airport in a rented building and a temporary hangar in the airport. The government allotted 2.71 acres of land to the academy, to be built near the Air India Hangar.[8]
In March 2016, the then UDF-led Government of Kerala launched an air ambulance service exclusively for speedy organ transplantation transportation using the twin-engine aircraft of the academy, an MoU was signed between RAGAAT and the Kerala Network for Organ Sharing. However, in July that year, the newly elect LDF-led government decommissioned the project, citing that it was not cost effective or viable.[9]
In 2018, the academy began cross-country flying to Kannur International Airport, until then, they used to fly to Madurai Airport, Mangalore International Airport or Calicut International Airport for cross-country flight training.[10] In 2019, RAAGAT began admitting students from other flying schools for flying training when students from their own batch are undergoing ground training.[11] The academy also opened an off-campus centre at the Kannur International Airport in 2019. The first flight was flagged off by chief ministerPinarayi Vijayan.[3]
In 2016, a trainee at the institution alleged that he faced casteist slur and physical assault from a trainer.[12]
In 2022, a female trainee accused the chief flying instructor K T Rajendran of attempting to molest her mid-flight inside the cockpit during a training session.[13][14][15]