Rcmutz
Cleared for Takeoff
I probably spend around 3% of my income on fixed expenses. I don't track fuel and oil that much.
I'm at 3-4% including fuel, assuming 40 hrs/year.
I probably spend around 3% of my income on fixed expenses. I don't track fuel and oil that much.
I believe I am a cheap bastard.
No debt, other than the mortgage for the house, my wife and I have decent jobs, some additional savings, no kids, no boat, no fancy cars, no cabin or other financial obligations and fly a 1966 Cessna 172 with a mogas STC. Fixed costs for hangar and insurance are just $210 / month + maybe another $100 / month for the owner assisted annual.
Regarding the variable costs, I assume per hour around $32 for gas, $10 for the engine overhaul and another $20 for repairs: ~60 - 70 / hour, not including upgrades like paint or a new interior.
At 80 hours / year and $65 / hour, we'd end up at around $8,920 / year, including fixed cost, but still without upgrades. The capital employed for the acquisition of the plane is also not taken into consideration.
This is certainly a lot of money, but still something somebody with a 'normal' job can afford, if he wants to and sets the priorities right.
So that made me wonder ... what percentage of annual income do airplane owners spend on their planes?
Exactly...it is not your income that matters, it is your disposable income that is important and that is determined by your proprieties in life...which applies to any income level.
I'm at 3-4% including fuel, assuming 40 hrs/year.
I probably spend around 3% of my income on fixed expenses. I don't track fuel and oil that much.
Frankly, for me it's all in undershooting housing. my peers typically spend my entire flying budget plus my current housing cost combined, just in housing.
One person reported an annual income of $100 million...
Disagree. Plane is significantly more expensive.
When we had our daughter, I barely noticed the impact. The plane - I notice. Maybe that's because I track plane expenses better, however.
I obviously don't make near enough money to have an airplane.
Should ask # cars, boats, campers, and exwives. And how far your house is from an ocean, that's a big dollar to mile correlation. Dumping toys and dumping toy debt most people could afford a plane. Most don't have the will to stand up to consumer peer pressure and the airplane that they could afford would never be on the cover of flying mag. So they'd rather have a pontoon boat and wank off to pictures of turbine airplanes. Heard there is a flight school in Cali that practically gives airplanes away
I believe I am a cheap bastard.
No debt, other than the mortgage for the house, my wife and I have decent jobs, some additional savings, no kids, no boat, no fancy cars, no cabin or other financial obligations and fly a 1966 Cessna 172 with a mogas STC. Fixed costs for hangar and insurance are just $210 / month + maybe another $100 / month for the owner assisted annual.
Regarding the variable costs, I assume per hour around $32 for gas, $10 for the engine overhaul and another $20 for repairs: ~60 - 70 / hour, not including upgrades like paint or a new interior.
At 80 hours / year and $65 / hour, we'd end up at around $8,920 / year, including fixed cost, but still without upgrades. The capital employed for the acquisition of the plane is also not taken into consideration.
This is certainly a lot of money, but still something somebody with a 'normal' job can afford, if he wants to and sets the priorities right.
I can't agree with you guys. Median household income in the U. S. is below $60,000 per year. If someone making that income were single and had very low housing expenses, lived in a low cost of living area, and found cheap hangar rent, maybe he could pull it off. Maybe, I'm not sure, especially if you when you include having to come up with the purchase price.
Even for someone with a much higher income, if that person has a family, it's not going to happen. Case in point, me. Our family income is in the very low six figures,and there's no way I can afford an airplane. As far as the expensive toys go, we have none, and no club memberships either. We buy new cars that average about $30,000 each, and drive them 8 to 12 years before getting a new one. I do half a dozen running races and a couple of short distance triathlons per year, and probably spend $500 per year on entry fees, shoes, and clothing. I go to a couple of car races per year, about $150 for tickets, that's all we spent on sports tickets last year. We don't go to concerts or live shows. We borrowed $220,000 to buy a house 17 years ago, still owe about $36,000. We try to eat out once a week, but don't always make it, sometimes a child's activity gets in the way or my wife is on call. Speaking of her, she's the only one I've had. She works sporadically, so we've never spent much on child care. She cleans our house, I do the yardwork, lots of home improvement and maintenance, and some mechanical work on the cars. Since we've been married, we've flown a total of four round trips on the airlines, three of which included our daughters. My wife is not a clothes horse. Both children are in public school.
Where's the money go? Housing, for sure. Our house is getting to the age where it is starting to need some things. This isn't helped by the sorry quality of fixtures that the builder put in. Food, taxes, car expenses, children's activities, a little bit for clothing, medical and dental. I'm looking at a pay stub, and between Federal, State, Medicare, Social Security, 401k, long term disability, flexible spending for medical, and my share of the health insurance, a third of the paycheck is gone before I get it. I suppose we could have bought a less expensive house, but there are tradeoffs. A friend of mine did that, but now he's paying for private school because he's not impressed with what the public schools offer in his area. But even if we did, and sent our children to public schools anyway, and cut out their activities, we still couldn't afford any airplane. Even if we managed to squeeze out enough to pay for the airplane, then what? Are we going to fly locally 100 hours per year? No, we'd want to go somewhere, and that costs money too.
No, the average family cannot afford an airplane.
One last thing, if any of the above sounds like complaining, I apologize, it's not meant to. We have it way, way better than most families in America, and for that matter, the world, and we are very thankful for that. I'm just trying to make the point that your situation has to be exceptional to afford an airplane.
I'm actually kind of surprised how low on the list I ended up!Well, I have learned one thing for sure.. People on this site aren't poor.
I can't agree with you guys. Median household income in the U. S. is below $60,000 per year. If someone making that income were single and had very low housing expenses, lived in a low cost of living area, and found cheap hangar rent, maybe he could pull it off. Maybe, I'm not sure, especially if you when you include having to come up with the purchase price. [...]
MEDIAN
Annual income:
$197,500.00
Aircraft value: $77,500.00
% income: 39.24%
Annual expense: $12,000.00
% income: 6.08%
As I said, people on this site are well off.
If anyone thinks the average family salary is 200k, they are indeed smoking the pipe
And all I'm saying is the good people of this site are well above average. I'm not envious, as I'm in the same category.I don't believe anyone has said that the average family makes that much. Just that the people who claimed to be aircraft owners who answered the survey claimed that much. And past surveys seem to confirm that comfortable income level.
If I did own an airplane it would be sub $25k, since that is as much as I'd care to invest. But then, I don't think my wife and I together ever made over $200k in any one year. If I had been an owner and replied to the survey I'd be among those with a household income currently about half the surveyed median.
Holy crap. I don't think I need to be owning an airplane now. Anyone want to buy a 182?
Formerhangie buy and drive two 15k cars and there is your airplane.
Kids have tons of toys? Not judging, the amount of trinkety crap toys my wife buys for the kid, makes me nuts. Adds up to real money.
what's the standard deviation on that mean ?
Wow, I finally read the results and for the first time in my life I'm below average in every category. This really isn't Lake Wobegon.