It’s Not as Clear-Cut as You Think

The assumption: private jets are for billionaires. First class is the sensible luxury. In many cases, that’s true — for a single traveller on a long-haul route, first class is hard to beat on price.

But the moment you add passengers, complexity, or tight schedules, the equation shifts.

The Numbers

London to Nice, 4 passengers:

First Class (Commercial):

  • Ticket cost: ~£2,800 per person
  • Total for 4: ~£11,200
  • Airport time: 2–3 hours (check-in, security, lounge)
  • Flight time: 2h (if direct — often requires connection)
  • Schedule: Fixed airline timetable
  • Luggage: Airline limits apply

Private Jet (Light):

  • Total cost: ~€9,000 total
  • Airport time: 15 minutes
  • Flight time: 1h 40min
  • Schedule: Your timetable
  • Luggage: Bring what you need

For four passengers, the charter is already cheaper. Add a fifth or sixth, and the gap widens further.

Where Charter Wins on Cost

  • Groups of 4+ on intra-European routes
  • Multi-city itineraries (3 cities in 2 days — try that commercially)
  • Remote airports (no airline service to Samedan, Chambéry, or Olbia-Costa Smeralda on your schedule)
  • Last-minute travel (walk-up first class fares can exceed charter costs)
  • Time-critical journeys (board meetings, site visits, deal closings)

Where First Class Still Wins

  • Solo long-haul travel — a first class suite on Emirates or Singapore Airlines is hard to match per-person
  • Fixed schedules with plenty of lead time
  • Loyalty programmes — if you’re burning points, the value equation changes entirely

The Hidden Cost: Time

A return flight Munich–London on a commercial carrier costs roughly 8 hours of your day, door to door. Check-in, security, boarding, taxiing, baggage claim, transfer.

The same trip by charter: 4 hours, door to door. That’s half a working day back.

For a senior executive billing at €500/hour, those 4 recovered hours are worth €2,000. Multiply that across a year of monthly travel and the charter practically pays for itself.

The Real Question

It’s not “Can I afford a private jet?” — it’s “Can I afford not to consider one?”

For solo leisure travel, fly commercial. For groups, tight schedules, or complex itineraries — run the numbers. You might be surprised.