The one-line verdict
Choose NetJets if peak-day availability, fleet depth, and financial stability are your priorities. Choose Flexjet if crew consistency, a younger fleet, lower fractional entry cost, and the ability to sell unused hours matter more. Both are excellent programs — the right answer genuinely depends on your flying profile.
The full comparison
| Factor | NetJets | Flexjet |
|---|---|---|
| Fractional entry (1/16th light jet) | ~$850,000+ | $600,000–$800,000 |
| Jet card entry (25 hrs, light jet) | ~$215,000+ | $198,425+ |
| Monthly management fee | $12,000–$28,000/mo | $10,000–$15,000/mo (light jet) |
| Fleet size | 858 aircraft | 323+ aircraft |
| Dedicated crew program | No — crew rotates | Yes — Red Label by Flexjet |
| Fleet age guarantee | No guarantee | Max 5 years (Red Label) |
| Jet card lead time | As little as 4 hours | 120 hours (5 days) |
| Jet card blackout/peak days | Up to 90 blackout days | 45 peak days (surcharge) |
| Sell unused hours | No | Yes — up to 25% |
| Financial backing | Berkshire Hathaway | Directional Aviation |
| International coverage | NetJets Europe + global | Primarily North America |
| Q1 2026 utilisation | Positive, steady | +12% YoY — fastest growing |
| Customer retention | Not disclosed | 97% fractional retention |
| Safety rating | ARGUS Platinum | ARGUS Platinum (14 yrs) |
| Cabin range | Light jet to Global 7500 | Light jet to G700 |
The pricing comparison in detail
For a 1/16th fractional share in the light jet category — 50 hours per year — here's how the first-year costs compare:
| Cost component | NetJets | Flexjet |
|---|---|---|
| Share purchase | ~$850,000 | $600,000–$800,000 |
| Monthly mgmt fee (annual) | $144,000–$168,000 | $120,000–$180,000 |
| Occupied hourly (50 hrs) | ~$425,000 (@$8,500/hr) | ~$375,000 (@$7,500/hr est.) |
| Year 1 total cash out | ~$1.42–$1.47M | ~$1.10–$1.16M |
| Residual value at exit | ~50–70% of purchase | ~50–70% of purchase |
Flexjet is cheaper in year 1 — by roughly $300,000 for equivalent cabin access. The gap narrows slightly on larger cabins where Flexjet's management fees can be comparable to NetJets. On jet cards, the difference is smaller: ~$17,000 on a 25-hour light jet card purchase.
This is the most consequential practical difference between the two programs. NetJets guarantees aircraft with as little as 4 hours' notice. Flexjet's LXi jet card requires 120 hours (5 full days). If last-minute private flying is a regular part of your schedule — emergency travel, schedule changes, opportunistic trips — NetJets wins this decisively. If you plan ahead consistently, it becomes less relevant.
The crew consistency question
This is where Flexjet wins outright, and it's a meaningful win for buyers who care about it. Flexjet's Red Label program assigns dedicated pilots to your aircraft for the life of your contract. The same crew, the same aircraft, configured to your preferences. NetJets does not offer anything equivalent — you fly with whoever is rostered, which is entirely standard in the industry but genuinely different from Flexjet's model.
For buyers who travel with family, have specific safety expectations of their crew, or value the relationship of knowing who is flying them, this distinction is real. For buyers who simply want a safe, comfortable private aircraft and don't place weight on crew familiarity, it's less important.
Financial stability
NetJets has the most credible financial backing of any private aviation program in the world. Berkshire Hathaway has owned NetJets since 1998 and has demonstrated its commitment through multiple business cycles. For buyers depositing $500,000–$1M+ into a fractional program, this backing materially reduces counterparty risk.
Flexjet's parent Directional Aviation (Chairman Kenn Ricci) is a solid private aviation operator with $3.8 billion in 2024 revenue and strong EBITDA. It is not Berkshire Hathaway — but it is a well-run, profitable business. The financial risk gap between the two is real but not alarming for a program of Flexjet's size and profitability.
A small number of buyers use both: a Flexjet 1/16th share for Red Label crew consistency on their most important trips, backed by a Sentient Jet card for additional hours and flexibility on less critical travel. This gives you crew consistency where it matters and non-expiring overflow hours at a competitive rate — and at certain flying volumes can be cheaper than a larger Flexjet or NetJets share alone.
Who should choose which
- Peak-day guaranteed availability matters above all else
- Berkshire Hathaway financial backing gives you confidence
- You travel frequently internationally, incl. US-Europe
- You need aircraft with less than 4 hours notice regularly
- Corporate procurement prefers the market-leader brand
- Dedicated crew (Red Label) is important to you or your family
- Lower fractional entry cost is a meaningful factor
- You plan flights 5+ days ahead — 120hr lead time isn't an issue
- Selling up to 25% of unused hours has value for your pattern
- A fleet age max of 5 years matters to you