Cost Index — What Does It Do?
beginnerMost pilots type a cost index from their OFP and never think about it again. In this scenario you try three values — 0, 30, and 80 — to feel what the number actually controls: the trade-off between speed and fuel burn.
Start this scenario
Open the SimTuts A320 MCDU trainer and select “Cost Index — What Does It Do?” from the scenarios list to walk through it step-by-step on the simulated keypad.
Open trainer →Step-by-step: Cost Index — What Does It Do?
- Set up the route. Type LIRF/LEMD (Rome Fiumicino to Madrid) and press 1R.
Cost Index (CI) is a single number that tells the FMS how to balance two costs: the cost of fuel, and the cost of time (crew, maintenance, schedule). The FMS uses CI to compute one optimum cruise speed (ECON SPD) and one optimum descent profile.
- Try CI = 0 first. Type 0 and press 5L.
CI 0 means "fuel is everything, time is free." The FMS picks the slowest cruise speed that still gets the aircraft there — Maximum Range Cruise. You burn the least fuel possible but the flight takes longer. Almost no airline uses CI 0 in real operations because crew/maintenance costs make time too valuable.
- Now try CI = 30 — a typical airline value. Type 30 and press 5L.
CI 30 is roughly where most short/medium-haul airlines operate. The FMS picks an ECON speed about Mach 0.78 in cruise — fast enough to keep the schedule, slow enough to save real fuel. The exact number per airline depends on their fuel-vs-crew cost ratio, fleet age, and route mix.
- Now try CI = 80 — pushing the speed up. Type 80 and press 5L.
CI 80 means "we are late, get us there." ECON cruise climbs to roughly Mach 0.80 — pushing toward the A320's MMO of Mach 0.82. Fuel burn rises sharply because drag scales with speed squared. Used to recover from delays, ATC speed restrictions, or airline-mandated catch-up. The maximum CI an Airbus FMS accepts is 999, but values above 100 are rare in practice.
- Set CI back to 30 — the value you would actually fly. Type 30 and press 5L.
The OFP your dispatcher prints will have a CI on it (e.g. CI 32, CI 28, CI 45). You enter exactly what they wrote — they have already balanced the day's fuel price and any schedule pressure. Your job is to type it accurately, not to guess a "good" value.
Need 1-on-1 help?
If you want a real flight sim instructor to walk you through this scenario live — screen-share, ask questions, get feedback in real time — book a session on SimTuts.
Browse tutors →