There is a cost to private aviation that does not appear on any invoice. It is not the charter rate, the fuel surcharge, or the positioning fee. It is the mental load carried by the principal — or more often, their EA — who is actively managing the aviation programme rather than simply using it.
The calls to confirm availability. The cross-checking of operator safety ratings. The negotiation of terms on short-notice bookings. The post-flight debrief that was never given because the operator considers the transaction complete at block-off. The research required to determine whether the aircraft that showed up matches the aircraft that was booked.
This is not an abstract concern. Among the family offices that manage aviation programmes for active principals, the administrative overhead of fragmented, multi-broker, multi-operator arrangements is a documented problem — one that consumes EA bandwidth that has a real cost when applied to its highest-value alternative uses.
The private aviation industry sells freedom. In practice, too many of its arrangements deliver the opposite — a complex, high-maintenance relationship that requires the client to do significant work to extract the product they were promised.
The principals who have resolved this have done so by consolidating. One trusted aviation partner. Deep accountability. A relationship in which the operator carries the cognitive load and the principal carries none of it.
That is what the product should have been from the beginning.
Curated by: Hype Luxury



