Love toFly Again

How Much Does It Cost to Charter a Private Jet? (2025 Pricing Guide)

By Kevin Godlewski on 07 July 2025
Blog

People choose private jet travel for reasons that are obvious and undeniable: convenience, luxury, and efficiency. The price of chartering a private jet, however, can be quite a bit less obvious. Why? Read on to find out. 

By Kevin Godlewski | Updated January 2026

Private jet charter costs between $3,000 and $15,000+ per flight hour, with total trip prices typically ranging from $10,000 for a short regional flight to $150,000+ for intercontinental travel on a large cabin jet.

Here's what you can expect by aircraft category:

Aircraft Category Hourly Rate Passengers Typical Mission
Light Jet $3,000–$5,500 6–8 Regional flights under 3 hours
Midsize Jet $5,000–$8,000 7–9 Cross-country, stand-up cabin
Super-Midsize $6,500–$10,000 8–10 Coast-to-coast nonstop
Large Cabin $8,000–$12,000 10–14 Transcontinental, maximum comfort
Ultra-Long Range $10,000–$15,000+ 12–18 International, 6,000+ nm range

These are market-rate ranges, but every charter is custom-priced—and can be significantly less than these hourly rates based on your specific route, timing, and aircraft availability. I've arranged flights at 40% below "standard" rates by matching clients with aircraft already positioned near their departure city or needing to reposition anyway.

We've been arranging private jet charters for nearly 25 years. Here's the insider perspective on what actually drives your quote—and how to get the best value.


What Determines Your Charter Price

Every private charter is a custom flight. Unlike commercial airlines with fixed seat prices, your quote depends on real-time factors: which aircraft are available, where they're currently located, how busy the market is that week, and what your specific trip requires.

This is why we don't offer "instant quotes." Many websites show generic price ranges that don't reflect actual aircraft availability. We've seen too many travelers burned by bait-and-switch pricing—an attractive initial number that balloons once real planes enter the picture. Instead, we build custom quotes within 24 hours based on aircraft actually positioned near your route.

Four main factors determine your price:

1. Aircraft Type

Smaller jets cost less per hour but may require fuel stops on longer routes. Larger jets cost more but offer nonstop transcontinental range, bigger cabins, and amenities like full galleys and lower cabin pressure altitude (which means less fatigue on long flights). The right aircraft balances your passenger count, route distance, and budget. Our aircraft guide breaks down each category in detail.

2. Route and Positioning

If you're departing from a major metro area, there's likely an aircraft nearby. If you're departing from a smaller regional airport, the jet may need to fly empty to pick you up—this "positioning" or "ferry" flight adds to your cost.

But positioning works both ways. I've arranged trips where a remote departure location happened to be the temporary base for a transient aircraft and crew. The owner was happy to book a charter that aligned with their schedule, and my client paid well below market rate.

3. Timing and Demand

Flying to Aspen during ski season? West Palm Beach in February? Headed to the Super Bowl, Cannes, or Fashion Week? Demand spikes and prices follow.

Conversely, flying against typical traffic patterns can yield real savings. Private jets based in the New York and Philadelphia metro areas often fly empty to Florida and the Caribbean on Sunday evenings to pick up their owners after the weekend. If your southbound trip aligns with that repositioning need, you benefit from what the industry calls an "empty leg"—sometimes at 25-50% below standard rates.

4. Trip Duration

Most charter contracts include minimum daily charges—typically 2 to 2.5 flight hours per day. A one-hour flight with a three-day stay means you're paying for flight time even while the aircraft sits. This protects the operator from opportunity cost, but it's a factor that catches first-time charterers off guard.


Fuel and Operating Costs

Jet-A fuel currently averages over $6 per gallon—compared to under $4 for regular gasoline. A midsize jet like the Citation Excel burns roughly 1,000 gallons on a New York to Chicago roundtrip, adding $6,000+ in fuel costs alone.

Fuel prices fluctuate with seasons, geopolitics, and regional supply. The same flight on the same aircraft might swing 10% or more month-to-month based on fuel alone. That said, commercial airlines pay similar rates, so fuel isn't what makes private aviation expensive relative to the airlines—it's fixed costs and crew.

Speaking of crew: pilot salaries are built into base operating costs, but longer or more complex trips may require additional crew members, overnight hotel stays, meals, and per diem charges. Single-day missions on smaller aircraft sometimes include "wait time" fees if the crew is standing by during your meeting or event.


Fees on Every Charter Quote

Beyond the hourly rate, expect these standard charges:

Landing and Handling Fees Airports charge aircraft to land, park, and use ground services. Major hub airports charge premium rates—partly to discourage general aviation traffic from competing with commercial operations. A landing fee at Teterboro (serving NYC) runs significantly higher than at a regional field in New Jersey. Using a nearby smaller airport can save hundreds or thousands depending on the aircraft.

FBO Charges Fixed Base Operators (FBOs) are the private terminals where you board your aircraft. They provide fuel, ground handling, passenger lounges, and crew services. FBO fees vary widely by location and service level.

Federal Excise Tax The IRS assesses a 7.5% Federal Excise Tax on domestic air transportation, including private charters.

Segment Fees Each flight from one airport to another is a "segment." The current federal segment fee is $5.10 per passenger, per segment.

International Fees For flights outside the US, add customs and immigration charges, international handling fees, overflight permits, and potentially cabotage restrictions depending on your destination.


Optional Costs: Catering, Ground Transport, and Extras

Here's where you have control. The base charter gets you the aircraft and crew. Everything else is your choice.

Catering Ranges from complimentary light snacks and beverages (standard on most charters) to multi-course gourmet meals. We've arranged five-course catering at $300+ per person for clients who wanted a flying fine-dining experience. Most travelers fall somewhere in between—fresh sandwiches, fruit, quality beverages, maybe a cheese board.

Ground Transportation Many clients arrange their own cars or rideshare, but we can coordinate black car service, SUVs, or executive transportation at either end. A VIP transfer for a small executive team might add $500-$1,500 depending on distance and vehicle type.

Wi-Fi Most modern charter aircraft include complimentary Wi-Fi. But here's a hard-won lesson: some older systems charge by the megabyte—up to $8/MB. At that rate, a quick Instagram scroll burns through data fast.

How fast? A few years ago, a $4,500 Wi-Fi bill landed on my desk after a client's team used a metered system without realizing it. Now we triple-check every contract for Wi-Fi terms before confirming a charter. If connectivity matters to your trip, tell us—we'll make sure you're on an aircraft with unlimited or flat-rate service.

Other Services Pet accommodations, oversized luggage handling (golf clubs, ski equipment), onboard flight attendants for larger aircraft, security coordination—all available, all priced according to your specific requirements.


How to Get the Best Price

After 25 years in this business, here's what actually moves the needle:

Be Flexible on Dates Even a one-day shift can dramatically change aircraft availability. If a jet needs to reposition near your route anyway, you inherit favorable economics.

Book Against Traffic Patterns Southbound on Sunday evenings in winter. Northbound on Friday afternoons. Westbound Monday mornings from the East Coast. When your trip aligns with where aircraft need to go anyway, pricing improves.

Consider Empty Legs These are one-way flights where the aircraft would otherwise fly empty. Discounts of 25-50% are common, but you'll need schedule flexibility—empty legs are available when they're available, not necessarily when you want to travel.

Use a Broker Who Knows Current Positioning Real-time aircraft location data is what separates a good quote from a great one. We track where aircraft are today, not where they're theoretically based. That visibility creates opportunities that direct booking with a single operator simply can't match.

Right-Size the Aircraft Don't charter a large cabin jet for three passengers on a two-hour flight. Light jets and turboprops exist for a reason. Match the aircraft to the mission.


Planning Your Next Charter

Private jet travel is more than transportation—it's an investment in time, productivity, privacy, and comfort tailored exactly to your needs. Understanding what goes into the price helps you make informed decisions and recognize real value when you see it.

Ready to get a quote? Tell us your route, dates, and passenger count →. We'll build a custom proposal within 24 hours based on actual aircraft availability—no bait-and-switch, no generic estimates.


About the Author

Kevin Godlewski is owner and managing director of Executive Charter Services. He earned his FAA private pilot license in college and has spent more than two decades arranging private jet charters for executives, entrepreneurs, and discerning travelers. He still gets excited talking about aircraft—just ask him about cabin pressure altitude.

 

Frequently Asked Questions About Private Jet Charter Pricing

How much does it cost to charter a private jet?

Private jet charter costs range from $3,000 to $15,000+ per flight hour depending on aircraft size. Light jets typically run $3,000–$5,500/hour, midsize jets $5,000–$8,000/hour, super-midsize $6,500–$10,000/hour, and large cabin jets $8,000–$15,000+/hour. However, actual trip costs can be significantly lower when aircraft positioning aligns with your route. Total price includes hourly rate, positioning fees, fuel surcharges, landing fees, taxes, and any additional services you request.

How much does a private jet to Florida cost?

A private jet from the New York area to South Florida (Palm Beach, Miami, Fort Lauderdale) typically costs $18,000–$40,000 one-way depending on aircraft type. Light jets run toward the lower end; midsize and super-midsize jets with larger cabins cost more. Timing matters significantly—southbound flights on Sunday evenings in winter often benefit from empty leg pricing when aircraft reposition to pick up owners, potentially reducing costs by 25–50%.

Why don't charter companies give instant price quotes?

Legitimate charter brokers avoid instant quotes because private jet pricing depends on real-time aircraft availability, positioning requirements, and current market conditions. A generic "instant quote" can't account for whether the ideal aircraft is nearby or requires expensive repositioning. The difference can be thousands of dollars. Custom quotes based on your specific itinerary and actual aircraft availability ensure accurate pricing without surprises.

What is a positioning fee?

A positioning fee (also called a "ferry" or "deadhead" fee) covers the cost of flying an aircraft to your departure airport when it's not already based there. If you're departing from a less commonly used airport, your jet may need to fly some distance empty to pick you up—that flight time adds to your total cost. Experienced brokers can often find aircraft already positioned near your departure point, or needing to reposition in your direction anyway, to minimize or eliminate this expense.

What are empty leg flights?

Empty leg flights occur when an aircraft needs to reposition without passengers—for example, returning home after dropping off its owner or flying to pick up the next charter client. These flights are available at significant discounts, sometimes 25–50% below standard rates, for travelers with flexible schedules who can match the aircraft's existing route and timing. The tradeoff: empty legs are available when they're available, and schedules can shift if the primary trip changes.

Why does the same flight cost different amounts at different times?

Charter pricing fluctuates based on seasonal demand, aircraft availability, fuel prices, and special events. Flying to Aspen during ski season, Palm Beach in winter, or any destination during the Super Bowl, Cannes Film Festival, or Fashion Week commands premium pricing because demand exceeds supply. Fuel prices also shift with global markets. Conversely, flying against typical traffic patterns—like heading south when most aircraft are repositioning that direction anyway—can yield substantial savings.

What additional costs should I expect beyond the hourly rate?

Beyond the base hourly rate, expect: Federal Excise Tax (7.5% on domestic flights), segment fees ($5.10 per passenger per flight segment), landing and handling fees at FBOs, fuel surcharges if applicable, and crew overnight expenses for multi-day trips. Optional costs include catering, ground transportation, and special services. International flights add customs, permits, and handling charges. A thorough broker will itemize all costs in your quote before you commit—no surprises after the fact.

Is chartering a private jet cheaper than buying a ticket for a group?

For groups of 6–10 or more, private charter can approach or even beat the cost of business or first-class commercial tickets—especially when you factor in productivity, time savings, and avoiding connections. A light jet charter splitting $20,000 among 6 passengers works out to roughly $3,300 per person each way. Add the value of departing on your schedule, skipping security lines, landing closer to your destination, and holding private meetings in flight, and the economics often favor charter for business travel.

When our company plane has other commitments or is down for maintenance, ECS is the only company I ever work with for our supplemental lift.

Jen Ashcroft Flight Operations

We previously used a jet-card membership with another company, but when ECS helped us complete a flight when our membership couldn’t it was easy deciding who we would be going to for all of our future flights.  Thanks for saving the big day, and our road show.

Mary Jacobs SVP, Sales

Executive Charter Services helps me look good.  My boss knows she’ll get a great private jet experience each time, and I know that ECS will make arranging and planning the flight stress-free and easy despite our never-ending, and frequent last-minute changes!

Mark D. Personal Assistant to A-List Celebrity

We have a different need almost every time we call.  We’ve used smaller jets for the sales team, and longer-range options for our chairman and board.  ECS makes all the arrangements and ensures everything goes smoothly, every time.

Nicole Angleton Senior Executive Assistant to the Chairman

When everything has to be perfect ECS makes it happen.

Lori Adams Personal Assistant

The best in the business!

Kelly Jackson Assistant to President

Knowledgeable, professional, personal, and discreet – that’s why we keep coming back.

John Markley Corporate Travel Advisor

ECS makes it possible to accomplish the impossible.

Louis Seargant Talent Manager

ECS makes it easy for me to schedule a jet for my boss. One call, and I know that Kevin and his team are working hard to find the best jet at the best price.

Susan Ferrier Executive Assistant to CEO

Kevin has eliminated the need for me to navigate the myriad of companies in the jet charter space. I go directly to Kevin now as he is highly responsive, has impeccable attention to detail, understands the client base which he serves and is always competitive on pricing.

Luciel L. Executive Assistant at Benchmark
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Executive Charter Services is not a direct air carrier. We are an air charter brokerage company and as such, do not operate, own, or maintain aircraft. All advertised air charter transportation services are provided and operated by certified third-party FAA-licensed direct air carriers under Federal Aviation Regulations Parts 135 & Part 121 as issued by the FAA.
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