Chartering a private jet across Europe and the Atlantic is one of those topics where the headline numbers and the real numbers rarely match. After comparing dozens of operator quotes for the German speaking market in 2026, here is a grounded breakdown of two routes people ask about constantly: Munich to New York, and flying privately inside Switzerland.
Munich to New York: why the price swings so much
The Munich to New York leg is roughly 6,428 km with about 8 hours 47 minutes of flight time westbound. The single biggest cost driver is not the operator, it is whether the aircraft can do the crossing nonstop.
- A heavy jet such as a Challenger 650 or Falcon 900LX usually needs one fuel stop in Keflavik or Shannon westbound. That puts a one way charter in the region of 60,000 to 80,000 EUR.
- An ultra long range jet such as a Gulfstream G650 or Global 7500 does it nonstop into a headwind, which lands closer to 80,000 to 110,000 EUR one way.
Westbound you fight the jet stream, so range matters more than on the return. The eastbound flight back to Europe is roughly an hour shorter and often opens up nonstop options that were not viable on the way out. I put the full per class table together in this Munich to New York private jet cost guide, and the comparable Frankfurt to New York breakdown shows how the same logic plays out from the larger German hub.
Flying privately inside Switzerland
Switzerland is a different game. Distances are short, but the airports are premium and fee heavy. A few things that catch first time charterers:
- Hourly rates for light jets sit around 2,400 to 3,100 EUR. A Citation XLS class midsize starts higher.
- Geneva is the second busiest business aviation airport in Europe after Paris Le Bourget, and slots vanish during the January World Economic Forum week and the ski season.
- Night curfews are real. Zurich and Geneva both have restricted operating windows, and alpine strips like Samedan near St Moritz often allow visual approaches only.
If you want the route by route and airport by airport picture, I collected it in this guide to private jet costs in Switzerland.
Three things that actually move the bill
- Cabin class beats brand. The jump from a light jet to a heavy jet costs far more than the difference between two reputable operators. Pick the smallest cabin that fits your passengers and luggage.
- Empty legs are underrated. Repositioning flights on busy axes can run 40 to 75 percent below a standard charter if your timing is flexible.
- Book the slot early in summer. On constrained airports the limiting factor is not the aircraft, it is the arrival and departure slot. On a Level 3 coordinated airport every flight needs one allocated, and they go fast.
None of this is financial advice, just field notes from comparing real 2026 quotes. If you charter regularly, the pattern is always the same: the route physics set the floor, and flexibility on timing and cabin class sets how close to that floor you land.
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