Hayward left the Royal Air Force on 17 May 1919, when he was transferred to the unemployed list. However, on 24 October 1919 he was granted a short-service commission in the RAF as an observer officer. By early 1920 he was in India surveying the main civil air route between
Delhi and
Karachi. On 1 December 1923 Hayward, by now a
Flying Officer, was posted to the RAF Depot, pending assignment, and on 1 March 1924 he was posted to
No. 2 Flying Training School at
RAF Duxford.
Death No.2 FTS moved to
RAF Digby, Lincolnshire, in June 1924. There, on 15 August, Hayward was instructing Pilot Officer Charles Victor Breakey in an
Avro 504K, when their aircraft suffered an engine failure and plunged into the ground. Both men died later that day from their injuries. ==References==