Operator Profile · Updated April 2026
Flexjet

The premium fractional alternative to NetJets. Lower entry cost, a dedicated-crew program that NetJets doesn't offer, and a fleet growing faster than any other major operator. The right choice for buyers who value consistency over sheer fleet size.

Fractional Ownership Jet Card (LXi) Lease Program Red Label 323+ Aircraft ARGUS Platinum · 14 yrs Directional Aviation Founded 1995
BizAv Insider ratings
Fleet availability8/10
International reach7/10
Safety record10/10
Value for money6/10
Flexibility7/10
Crew consistency9/10
The strongest crew-consistency program in the market. Scores higher than NetJets on that dimension, lower on fleet depth. For 25–100 hr/yr buyers who care about who's flying them, Flexjet is typically the right call.
LXi Jet Card (25 hrs)
$198K+
Phenom 300 entry. Fuel surcharge ~$500/hr extra, billed separately.
Light jet entry point
Fractional 1/16th share
$600K–$800K
Light jet entry. Super-midsize from ~$1.3M.
~50 hrs/yr included
Monthly management fee
$10K–$15K
Light jet category. Higher for super-midsize and large cabin.
Billed every month
Occupied hourly rate
$6,500–$20,000
Phenom 300 to G700. Plus fuel surcharge and 7.5% FET.
Per occupied flight hour

What Flexjet is

Flexjet is the second-largest fractional ownership program in North America, operating a fleet of 323+ owned aircraft ranging from Embraer Phenom 300 light jets to the Gulfstream G700. Founded in 1995 and owned by Directional Aviation under Chairman Kenn Ricci, Flexjet posted revenues of $3.8 billion in 2024 with $398 million in EBITDA — financially solid and growing faster than almost any other program in the space.

Flexjet's Q1 2026 utilisation was up 12% year-on-year — the strongest growth among any of the major operators tracked by Aviation Week. That compares to a 3% decline at VistaJet and a 40% decline at Wheels Up over the same period. Flexjet is gaining market share.

Its most important differentiator is Red Label by Flexjet — a dedicated-crew program where fractional owners fly with the same pilots on the same aircraft for the duration of their contract. No other major fractional program offers this as standard. It is the primary reason Flexjet maintains a 97% fractional customer retention rate.

The Flexjet position

Flexjet sits between NetJets (larger fleet, higher cost, no crew dedication) and boutique programs like Nicholas Air (smaller, domestic-only, lower cost). For buyers flying 25–150 hours per year who value who's flying them as much as how many planes the operator has, Flexjet is typically the strongest answer in the market.

Red Label by Flexjet — explained

Flexjet's defining feature
Red Label by Flexjet

Red Label is Flexjet's premium fractional tier — and the feature that most meaningfully separates it from NetJets. Fractional owners in the Red Label program are assigned a dedicated crew who fly exclusively with them throughout the contract. The aircraft assigned to you is no more than five years old, configured to your personal preferences, and the same crew gets to know your travel habits, preferences, and standards over time.

Dedicated crew
Same pilots assigned for the life of your contract. They know your preferences, your family, your schedule.
Fleet age guarantee
Your aircraft is no more than five years old. Flexjet rotates fleet out on a schedule to maintain this.
Personalised interior
Seating, catering, and cabin configuration set to your preferences as standard, not as a request.
Who Red Label matters most for

Buyers who travel with family, have specific safety expectations of their crew, or simply value the relationship of knowing who is flying them. For corporate flight departments sending executives on sensitive trips, the accountability of a named, dedicated crew is also a meaningful compliance and duty-of-care consideration.

Flexjet programs in 2026

LXi Jet Card
25-hour debit card · Owned fleet · No fractional ownership · Entry point
$7,937/hr
Phenom 300 base rate
Entry cost (25 hrs)
$198,425+ (light jet)
Peak / blackout days
45 peak days, stricter on renewals
Callout / lead time
120 hrs (5 days) required
Fractional Share (1/16th)
Ownership stake · Red Label available · ~50 hrs/yr · 5-year contract
$600K–$800K
Light jet entry
Monthly mgmt fee
$10,000–$15,000/mo
Sell unused hours
Up to 25% within network
Non-Flexjet aircraft
<5% — hours refunded if exceeded
G700 World Access
Ultra-long range · 40 days/year unlimited hours · International focus
~$20,000/hr
G700 occupied rate
Structure
40 days/yr, unlimited hours per day
Aircraft
Gulfstream G700 (~$96M list)
Best for
Transatlantic / ultra-long-range
Watch out — jet card lead time

Flexjet's LXi jet card requires 120 hours (5 full days) advance booking — significantly more than NetJets' 4–10 hours. This is the most commonly cited frustration from jet card customers and makes Flexjet unsuitable for buyers who need last-minute flexibility. Fractional owners have shorter lead times. If short-notice booking is important, Sentient Jet or NetJets are better jet card options.

Fleet overview

Flexjet operates 323+ aircraft across four primary manufacturers: Embraer (Phenom 300, Praetor 500/600), Bombardier (Challenger 300/350), and Gulfstream (G450, G650, G700). All aircraft are owned by Flexjet — there is no broker network or third-party sourcing, which maintains quality control and crew familiarity across the fleet.

Cabin category Aircraft Range Passengers
Light jet Embraer Phenom 300 Up to 2,000nm Up to 8 pax
Midsize Embraer Praetor 500 Up to 3,340nm Up to 9 pax
Super-midsize Bombardier Challenger 350, Praetor 600 Up to 4,000nm Up to 9 pax
Large cabin Gulfstream G450, Bombardier Challenger 650 Up to 4,350nm Up to 13 pax
Ultra-long range Gulfstream G650, G700 7,000nm+ non-stop Up to 19 pax

Flexjet vs NetJets — the honest comparison

These are the two programs most buyers compare first. Here's how they stack up across the factors that actually matter:

Factor Flexjet NetJets
Fractional entry (1/16th light jet) $600K–$800K $850K+
Jet card entry (25 hrs, light jet) $198,425+ ~$215,000+
Fleet size 323+ aircraft 858 aircraft
Dedicated crew Yes — Red Label program No — crew rotates
Jet card lead time 120 hours (5 days) As little as 4 hours
Peak / blackout days (jet card) 45 days (surcharge) Up to 90 blackout days
Sell unused hours Yes — up to 25% No
Fleet age guarantee Yes — max 5 yrs (Red Label) No guarantee
Q1 2026 utilisation growth +12% YoY Positive but slower growth
Financial backing Directional Aviation Berkshire Hathaway
Customer retention 97% fractional retention Not publicly disclosed

Honest pros and cons

What Flexjet does well
  • Red Label dedicated crew — unique in the fractional market
  • Fleet age max 5 years — younger than most competitors
  • Lower fractional entry cost than NetJets
  • Sell up to 25% of unused hours — rare flexibility
  • Fastest-growing utilisation among major operators in 2026
  • ARGUS Platinum for 14+ consecutive years
  • G700 World Access for unlimited-day ultra-long-range travel
  • 97% fractional customer retention — quality signal
Where Flexjet falls short
  • 323 aircraft — less than half of NetJets' fleet depth
  • 120-hour jet card lead time — worst among major programs
  • Fuel surcharge billed separately from jet card rate (~$500/hr)
  • 5-year fractional commitment — no short-term option
  • International routing less deep than VistaJet or NetJets Europe
  • Directional Aviation backing — less financially robust than Berkshire
  • Jet card restricted to Phenom 300 and Challenger 300 only

Who Flexjet is — and isn't — right for

Flexjet is right for you if…
  • Crew consistency and relationship matter to you
  • You fly 25–150 hours per year with predictable patterns
  • You want fractional ownership at a lower entry than NetJets
  • You travel with family and value a personalised cabin experience
  • You like the option to sell unused hours within the network
  • You want a guaranteed newer aircraft (Red Label)
  • You're flying primarily North American routes
Flexjet is not right for you if…
  • You need last-minute booking flexibility — 120hr lead time rules it out
  • Peak-day volume demands NetJets' deeper 858-aircraft fleet
  • You need extensive international routing beyond US/Europe
  • You're flying under 25 hours per year — economics don't work
  • You want no long-term commitment — 5-year contract required
  • Financial stability of your operator is your primary concern

How Flexjet compares to alternatives

EDITORIAL INDEPENDENCE — BizAv Insider accepts no payment from Flexjet or any aviation operator for placement, editorial coverage, or ratings. Pricing data is sourced from publicly available 2026 figures and operator disclosures. All costs are indicative — verify current pricing directly with Flexjet before committing. Fuel surcharges, federal excise tax, and other fees apply in addition to quoted rates and vary by program tier and flight profile. Last reviewed April 2026. BizAv Insider is not affiliated with Flexjet, Inc. or Directional Aviation.