Head-to-Head Comparison · 2026

NetJets vs Wheels Up

These two programs attract completely different buyers — yet they get compared constantly. NetJets is the premium fractional leader. Wheels Up is the accessible entry point. Understanding the gap between them is the fastest way to know which one you actually need.

Updated June 2026 Independent · No operator sponsorship
Program A
NetJets
858 aircraft · Berkshire Hathaway · Founded 1964
Best for: 50+ hrs/yr, peak-day certainty, international
vs
Program B
Wheels Up
~135 owned aircraft · Delta Air Lines backed · Founded 2013
Best for: Under 25 hrs/yr, Delta loyalty, domestic-only

The honest verdict upfront

This comparison is less close than it looks. NetJets and Wheels Up serve fundamentally different buyers — and if you're genuinely comparing them against each other, you're probably at the lower end of the flying volume spectrum where Wheels Up's entry price is appealing but NetJets' reliability is tempting.

The short version: if you fly under 25 hours per year domestically and the Delta loyalty benefits are valuable to you, Wheels Up is the right choice. If you fly more than that, need peak-day certainty, or travel internationally, NetJets wins on almost every dimension that matters — and the cost gap is less dramatic than it appears once you account for Wheels Up's annual membership fees stacking on per-flight costs.

The full comparison

Factor NetJets Wheels Up
Entry cost$215K+ (jet card) / $850K+ (fractional)$32,500 + $100K deposit (Core)
Annual feesNone on jet card$8,500/yr (Core) — before flying
Hourly rate (light jet)~$8,500/hr~$7,795/hr (Phenom 300)
Fleet size (owned)858 aircraft~135 aircraft
Total marketplace accessPrimarily own fleet1,500+ via marketplace
Safety ratingARGUS PlatinumWyvern Wingman
Lead timeAs little as 4 hours8–48 hours
Peak-day availabilityGuaranteed (owned fleet)Not guaranteed on all tiers
Turboprop pricing (2026)N/A — no turbopropsFully dynamic from Jan 2026
International coverageYes — incl. NetJets EuropePrimarily domestic US
Financial backingBerkshire HathawayDelta Air Lines (major investor)
Delta loyalty benefitsNoneDiamond Medallion status + SkyMiles
Hours expireCheck contract termsYes
Q1 2026 utilisation+71% vs 2019−40% YoY

The true cost comparison at 25 hours per year

The entry-price gap between the two programs looks enormous — but on an all-in annual basis, it narrows significantly once Wheels Up's fees are included:

Cost componentNetJets (jet card)Wheels Up (Core)
Entry / initiation$215,000 (25 hrs prepaid)$32,500 + $100,000 deposit
Annual membership feeNone$8,500/yr
Hourly rate × 25 hrs~$212,500 (@$8,500/hr)~$194,875 (@$7,795/hr Phenom)
Federal excise tax (7.5%)~$15,937~$14,615
Year 1 all-in (flight costs)~$228,437~$217,990
Capital at risk (unearned deposit)$215,000 prepaid$100,000 deposit

At 25 hours per year, Wheels Up is approximately $10,000 cheaper on flight costs — but you've deposited $100,000 versus $215,000. The real comparison is what happens to your capital: with NetJets, it's fully allocated to guaranteed hours. With Wheels Up, the $100,000 deposit is at-risk capital in an operator that was financially distressed three years ago.

The annual fee trap

Wheels Up's $8,500 annual Core membership fee exists before you fly a single hour. At 10 hours of flying per year, that fee represents $850 extra per flight hour that doesn't appear in the headline rate comparison. The fee advantage of Wheels Up's lower hourly rate erodes faster than most buyers calculate.

When Wheels Up's Delta benefits genuinely matter

The one area where Wheels Up has a genuine, unmatched advantage over NetJets is the Delta Air Lines integration. Delta Diamond Medallion status from a $100,000 deposit is a benefit typically requiring 125,000 qualifying miles — often impossible without extremely heavy commercial travel.

For buyers who mix private and commercial flying, sit in Delta One on transatlantic routes, and value Medallion benefits across Delta's network, this is a real financial value that can offset some of Wheels Up's cost premium. No other private aviation program offers a comparable commercial airline benefit.

The right question to ask yourself

Do you currently fly Delta frequently enough to value Diamond Medallion status? If yes, and you fly under 25 hours privately per year on domestic routes, Wheels Up is probably the right call. If Delta Medallion doesn't matter to you, or you fly more than 25 hours, the case for Wheels Up over NetJets (or alternatives like Sentient Jet and Nicholas Air) becomes very thin very quickly.

What the utilisation data tells you

NetJets logged over 200,000 flight hours in Q1 2026 — up 71% versus Q1 2019. Wheels Up's Q1 2026 hours were down 40% year-on-year. This divergence is the starkest signal in the market about where each program is headed.

NetJets is growing from a position of strength. Wheels Up is rationalising toward profitability after a period of aggressive and ultimately loss-making expansion. Both can be fine outcomes — but for a buyer depositing $100,000 with an operator, understanding the trajectory matters.

Who should choose which

Choose NetJets if…
Reliability is non-negotiable
  • You fly 25+ hours per year and need peak-day certainty
  • International travel is part of your profile
  • ARGUS Platinum safety rating is a requirement
  • Lead time flexibility (4 hours) matters to you
  • Delta loyalty benefits hold no value for your travel patterns
Choose Wheels Up if…
Entry price and Delta matter
  • Under 25 hours per year, primarily domestic
  • Delta Diamond Medallion status is genuinely valuable to you
  • You're testing private aviation before a larger commitment
  • App-driven booking convenience is important
  • You can plan flights 8–48 hours in advance consistently

EDITORIAL INDEPENDENCE — BizAv Insider accepts no payment from NetJets, Wheels Up, or Delta Air Lines for placement or coverage. All pricing figures are indicative based on publicly available 2026 data. Verify all current terms with both operators before committing. Last reviewed June 2026.