Fractional ownership of aircraft is an arrangement in which multiple owners share the use and costs of purchasing and operating an aircraft. Several management companies provide fractional ownership programs for aircraft, including NetJets, Flexjet, Volato,[1] PlaneSense, and AirSprint. Alternatively, owners can join together to purchase their aircraft, independently of a larger management company.
Fractional aircraft ownership allows individuals to purchase a share of an aircraft, instead of the entire aircraft itself. The price for this share is pro-rated based on the market price of a full aircraft. As a result of this purchase, owners have guaranteed, limited access to the plane or a similar one in the operator's fleet, proportional to the size of their share. Monthly maintenance fees and occupied hourly operating fees are required of fractional owners. Typically, the latter is charged only when an owner or guest is on board, not during the plane's travel to a pickup point or its return to its home base after a flight.
For shared aircraft that are part of a large management company fleet, owners have access to the full fleet of planes and may upgrade or downgrade for specific flights.[2] Ownership contracts are typically for five years. At the end of the contract, the owner can sell their share either back to the company or another owner waiting for a position. Most fleet management companies charge a "re-marketing fee" for the final sale.
In some cases, several individuals purchase and operate their chosen aircraft as an independent group without going through a commercial operator. If one individual then decides to sell their share, it may be purchased by the remaining owners or sold outside the group to another individual. The details will vary from group to group as it is subject to whatever terms were in the original contract.
In the commercial system, customers purchase or lease a fraction of an aircraft, alongside numerous other anonymous individuals. Depending on the company, the aircraft may be split into 16ths or even 32nds of a fractional share. These fractions translate to several hours per year, with a full 100 per cent share typically equating to 800 annual hours of usage. Most shares are sold at the 1/16 (50 hours) or 1/8 (100 hours) level.[3][2]
Although the aircraft is shared, owners are guaranteed access with 4–48 hours notice, depending on the provider and plan. Providers can offer this service, on such short notice, by having a fleet of similar aircraft, which are interchanged amongst the owners.
In addition, to purchase costs, owners pay a monthly management fee to cover the cost of maintenance, upgrades, hangar space, pilot salaries, and training. When using the aircraft, owners also pay for the flight hours and a nominal amount for taxiing.[3] The final cost component is fuel, which has a surcharge above the hourly fee to compensate for price volatility.
An owner's share allotment is depleted for actual hours of occupied flight, plus taxiing, with a 1 to a 2-hour minimum. Owners are not charged for any non-occupied flight time that may be required to get the aircraft to them and return to its home base. This is called variously "deadhead," "positioning," "ferry," or "empty leg" depending on the company.
In addition to the "owned" plane, customers gain access to other planes in the fleet. When desired, they may switch to larger or smaller planes on a set "interchange" formula. Access to a smaller aircraft may be guaranteed, but larger aircraft access may be conditional on the shares owned.
The size of a share may provide additional benefits including:
In the United States , fractional owners and operators are subject to Federal Aviation Regulations, FAR Part 91, Subpart K.[4]
Private air travel advisors can be of assistance with navigating and negotiating the so-called "boilerplate" fractional contract.
Owners rarely fly the specific aircraft in which they hold shared titles. More likely, they will travel on identical planes in the company's fleet. This is a natural consequence of the fractional model since many owners "pull" on the same plane. It's likely that the plane is either in use by another owner, or that another plane is positioned in a more convenient location for deployment.
This fleet flexibility is one of the key benefits of fractional ownership over full ownership. Owners aren't stranded when their plane is undergoing maintenance and they can upgrade or downgrade to other fleet aircraft for special trip requirements.
Fractional agreement terms are typically five years, after which owners sell their share back to the company for the then-current fair market value, less a "remarketing fee", typically around 7%. The fee may be waived for renewals. Customers may also lease their share in a variety of configurations, depending on their tax and financial profile. The "fair market value" calculation is a key consideration and can dominate the overall cost-benefit analysis of the fractional ownership format. Many fractional owners were burned by the volatile market and geopolitical conditions of the early 2000s and the recession in the late 2000s. All contracts should outline an appeals process if the owner disputes the end-of-contract valuation.
The original formula for fractional flight is similar to its present incarnation: customers purchase proportional shares of aircraft that are guaranteed to be available. The provider then purchases an additional 26 per cent of capacity (over and above the fleet purchased by clients) to fulfil that guarantee. These extra planes bring the guarantee to 98 per cent statistically. The last 2% of the guarantee represents holidays and other worst-case situations. To close this gap in the guarantee, the company relies on "supplemental lift" from charter—either from affiliated companies or trusted third-party charter operators. As more client-owners join, a network effect results in a reduction of expensive empty legs: with a critical mass of customers, the theory is that it becomes more likely that a particular trip can be accommodated with minimal deadheading. In reality, it is not clear how many aircraft are required to reach an efficient scale, whether it is 50 aircraft or 400 aircraft, or whether it ever happens.
According to Halogen Guides, which covered the industry, the initial assumptions underestimated the complexity, overhead costs and peak demands. This has been further impacted by the dramatic popularity of fractional card programs. The card programs place even more owners against each plane; each owner enjoying fully guaranteed access with as little as a single-year, 1/32 share commitment.
Finally, the burgeoning diversity of structural offerings (fractional ownership, fractional cards, charter cards, ad-hoc charter) creates an environment where clients may employ a portfolio of solutions, tapping each alternative depending on the cost profile of each trip. Certain trips can be most economically served by fractional, card or charter. If a client gets to cherry-pick for each trip, the fractional provider typically absorbs the least efficient travel. Partly in response to this, the larger fractional companies now position themselves as "solution providers", and offer fractions, cards, charter and full aircraft management.
According to a 2006 Halogen Guides Jets survey, not one company boasted of sustained bottom-line profitability. Even Warren Buffett's NetJets lost $80 million in 2005, attributed to foreign expansion and U.S. efficiency losses (specifically, paying for higher-cost charter flights when owner demand outstripped capacity).
During the recession of 2007 to 2009, the largest fractional providers saw significant downturns in their business. NetJets, Flexjet, and Flight Options have all reported significant subsequent growth and have added to their fleets. But CitationShares, a unit of aircraft manufacturer Cessna, stopped selling fractional shares in 2012. Avantair, operator of a fleet of 57 Avanti Piaggio P180s, filed for bankruptcy in June 2013.
One strategic thrust has been the introduction of efficiency incentives to better align client behaviour with operating efficiency. Some companies have resisted these programs. If fractional ownership's appeal is the simplification of flight, that appeal is reduced when accompanied by a host of special pricing adjustments and incentive programs. Despite this marketing challenge, cost concerns have resulted in numerous efficiency-driven programs.
Provider/AircraftType | Turboprop | Very Light | Light | Midsize | Super Midsize | Large | Ultra Long Range |
Airshare | No | No | Phenom 300 | No | Challenger 350 | No | No |
Alliance | No | No | No | XLS Gen II | No | Gulfstream IVSP (used), Global Express (used) | No |
AirSprint | No | No | CJ2+, CJ3 + | Legacy 450, Praetor 500 | No | No | No |
CB SkyShare | PC-12 (used) | No | CJ2 (used) | No | G200 (used) | No | No |
Flexjet | No | No | Phenom 300 | Legacy 450; Praetor 500 | Challenger 350; Praetor 600 | G450 | G650; G700 |
FlyExclusive | No | No | CJ3 | No | No | No | No |
NetJets | No | No | Phenom 300 | XLS | Challenger 350, Latitude, Longitude, Sovereign | Challenger 650 | Global 5000; Global 6000; Global 7500 |
PlaneSense | PC-12 | No | PC-24 | No | No | No | No |
Volato | No | HondaJet | No | No | G280 | No | No |
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional ownership of aircraft.
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