simtech
En-Route
How about wife and no kids and own a plane. HeheThat brings me to my next question, wife and kids vs. bachelor life and owning an airplane? Can’t have your cake and eat it too, right?
How about wife and no kids and own a plane. HeheThat brings me to my next question, wife and kids vs. bachelor life and owning an airplane? Can’t have your cake and eat it too, right?
That brings me to my next question, wife and kids vs. bachelor life and owning an airplane? Can’t have your cake and eat it too, right?
How about wife and no kids and own a plane. Hehe
I'll admit that I have a massive advantage with regards to making my own schedule during the summer and winter. This makes things like flying for proficiency and IFR currency much easier. That said planning ahead is very hard. I don't know if I'll make fly ins until a few days before, which made it VERY hard to schedule in a club environment. Having my own plane means that if I wake up and want to go flying, I can. I often wish I had a 9-5 job so I could plan things ahead. We planned our big western trip for mid June....by the first week of June I was convinced we'd have to cancel; a couple weeks of LONG days and I got things to a place I could leave. I'm still trying to catch up.
WRT Mrs. K, I'll tell you....she was very resentful when I first learned to fly. Our youngest was a newborn, and she was pretty angry that I was going flying three days a week while she was changing diapers hourly. Once I finally got my ticket, I took her on a couple date weekends...time away with no kids, which is what she desperately wants. Our first trip was to Louisville, and we had one of the most memorable trips of our marriage. That turned the page for her. She could SEE what aviation could do for HER. Not long after we took our two oldest to Florida, and again had an amazing time that wouldn't have been possible without GA. We got stuck by IMC on the way home, and starting my instrument was her suggestion....
Resistance to buying the Lance was minimal...once she was convinced I wasn't ruining our financial future for a toy, she was on board. I had already shown her what was possible. My advice to anyone with a hesitant spouse is to take them on a trip, just the two of you. Somewhere commercial aviation doesn't reach. Take an Uber. Stay in a nice hotel...something historic and beautiful. Show them what's possible when you don't have to arrive two hours early for your pat-down.
I know this is a loaded question and one that comes with many variables - but - in a general sense, what is the minimum amount of dough one needs to have on hand or at least bring home, to comfortably afford ownership of something like an M20C or similar performing airplane?
I realize it’s going to depend on the other liabilities you have, but let’s assume those are covered, how much left over cabbage is needed?
Not yet an owner, but here is how I'm planning it in my case
Purchase price 70K
Inspection (including me flying out there/hotel/etc) costs
Sales tax and registration 7K
cost to form LLC if you're doing that 200
Expenses to get the plane here
- CFI to fly with me ~1,000 (have to get them a return ticket home)
- Gas to fly out here $1,800
Then I know I'm going to have
Insurance (3-5k for me)
Initial tie down/hangar fee (may need to tie down for a short period) $1,000
Initial stuff I'll want in the plane from the get go
- tug 2,000
- cleaners, oil, etc 100
- I will bring some blankets/etc from the house along with tools so probably won't need to buy those
Dual instruction (Insurance required)
15 hours X Fuel and CFI = $4,0000
Then, I'm "set up" and have a plane that insured, I'm checked out in, and that is able to fly. So my 70k airplane will take 90K out of pocket to be usable and settled out.
Then, i would want to have at least 20K that would be no big deal if I hit some adversity with MX in the first year. Annual alone will be 4-6K and I hope to keep it close to that number without too many extras.
I would also pick up a few spares (fuel pump, starter, magneto) as the plane I'm considering is fairly unusual and I'd hate to be grounded waiting for a part that's pretty cheap to have an OH unit available, call that another $1,500
So I would expect the first year to be 90K+20K reserve + any flying expense beyond the initial training hours. If I fly it say another 50 hours, that's another 10k, so I'd want 120K set aside for the first year on a 70K purchase.
AND, i'd want to not be stressed out about some $5k repair if it happens (hence why I budgeted 20K for MX, though i truly expect to spend $6k)
Future years would be fuel (13k)/mx (6k)/storage (3k)/insurance (3k) = 25K
Just my two cents from someone close to purchase but who doesn't own yet. BUT, as I tell my wife, we get to sell our club membership ($2,500) and save the monthly fee and flying fees on that. $1,600 + $8450 so about 11K the first year.
This makes it not too bad. LOL
An old dilapidated Cessna 180 about 5 years ago. Don't ask me how I know.I’m curious to know what type of plane has a 70k purchase price with 3-5k insurance and 4-6k annuals.
6 seats vs 4 seats, that can be a jump. Though, I'm at 1300 for HP 4 seats, so that is a bit of a premium, could be airframe and time in type. Though RyanB isn't probably looking at a 6 seater.
That brings me to my next question, wife and kids vs. bachelor life and owning an airplane? Can’t have your cake and eat it too, right?
Hey Eman, I'll let you know when I can. did you answer the OP's question with your mooney experiences? sounds like he's looking for a plane like yours, essentially.I’m curious to know what type of plane has a 70k purchase price with 3-5k insurance and 4-6k annuals.
Hey Eman, I'll let you know when I can. did you answer the OP's question with your mooney experiences? sounds like he's looking for a plane like yours, essentially.
I'll discuss the details with Ryan at rough river.
I’m curious to know what type of plane has a 70k purchase price with 3-5k insurance and 4-6k annuals.
1) Nobody said anything about dual incomes.+1. Nothing wrong with being a DINK
There are some DINKS that work opposite shifts at 7-Elleven.
opposite shifts at 7-Elleven.
I often wish I had a 9-5 job so I could plan things ahead
have the advantage of access to three or four of the same model.
Hmm, even at 10 GPH, 100 hours is 1000 gallons. At $7 per gallon, you are starting at $7000.
Annual $2000 plus fixing anything wrong.
Insurance - low time pilot in a retract - $3000 - $3500
Tie down - $3000 - $4000 per year, Hangar $4000 - $7000
Data subscriptions - $800
Repairs - $2000 - $5000
Upgrades (paint, interior, avionics) - $2000 - $5000 (optional)
Engine overhaul fund - $20 per hour x 1000 hours = $2000
Tie down may be off. I don't tie down. EDIT - I just checked, yes, it is $100 per month, but paid quarterly, so I was remembering the $300.
But my hangar is $550 per month. And NOT a big city airport.
But nice new (less than 3 years old) hangars.
Thanks, Lynn, this is good information!@RyanB
Here's a breakdown of what it costs me to keep my 177RG at KFGU:
Yearly Costs:
Aircraft Note: $5100
Hangar: $3600
Insurance: $3400
Annual: $3000
Jeppesen Updates: $500
Surprise MX: $1000
Total Yearly Fixed costs: $16,600
Hourly Costs
Fuel: 60 / Hour
Oil and MX: $25
Reserve for Engine: $40
Total hourly costs: $125
I tend to be proactive during Annuals and spend to fix things most people would just put off (things that don't affect safety of flight, etc), and thats why my annual costs are on the higher side. I could it cheaper, but I like to improve my airplane every year if I can. I factor in "surprise MX" because you never know when you're gonna need to fix something during normal operations. Tail beacon, tires/tubes, bearings, etc.
I have a wife, whose a stay at home mom to our 6 year old. We also send our 6 year old to the private Montessori school in downtown Chattanooga. I'm a "Senior Solutions Architect" for Red Hat, which pays pretty well, but its a technical pre-sales job. Private ownership is doable even with a family, but it does take a lot of cash. A small partnership or co-owner is the ideal way to own an aircraft that you don't fly often. i honestly don't fly my Cardinal enough to justify the nearly $17k per year I spend on just fixed costs. My kiddo is starting to get interested in aviation so thats why I've been keeping the airplane, and not going to a club or partnership somewhere.
@RyanB
Here's a breakdown of what it costs me to keep my 177RG at KFGU:
Yearly Costs:
Aircraft Note: $5100
Hangar: $3600
Insurance: $3400
Annual: $3000
Jeppesen Updates: $500
Surprise MX: $1000
Total Yearly Fixed costs: $16,600
Hourly Costs
Fuel: 60 / Hour
Oil and MX: $25
Reserve for Engine: $40
Total hourly costs: $125
I tend to be proactive during Annuals and spend to fix things most people would just put off (things that don't affect safety of flight, etc), and thats why my annual costs are on the higher side. I could it cheaper, but I like to improve my airplane every year if I can. I factor in "surprise MX" because you never know when you're gonna need to fix something during normal operations. Tail beacon, tires/tubes, bearings, etc.
I have a wife, whose a stay at home mom to our 6 year old. We also send our 6 year old to the private Montessori school in downtown Chattanooga. I'm a "Senior Solutions Architect" for Red Hat, which pays pretty well, but its a technical pre-sales job. Private ownership is doable even with a family, but it does take a lot of cash. A small partnership or co-owner is the ideal way to own an aircraft that you don't fly often. i honestly don't fly my Cardinal enough to justify the nearly $17k per year I spend on just fixed costs. My kiddo is starting to get interested in aviation so thats why I've been keeping the airplane, and not going to a club or partnership somewhere.
That insurance seems high, doesnt it? I would expect that to be about half.
I'm 175 hours a year:
Insurance $5200 annually;
Maintenance including annual, $2000 a year (new plane);
Hangar $10,800 a year (expensive in the OC, CA);
Fuel $14,000 a year;
Garmin G1000, ForeFlignt, etc. $1500 a year;
Misc $500 a year.
= $34,000 a year or just under $3,000 a month.
That insurance seems high, doesnt it? I would expect that to be about half.