Cirrus SF50 Vision Jet operator VeriJet is expanding to California and adding a jet card program, starting at $2,500 per hour
Florida-based VeriJet, which flew its first flight in October, is now expanding to California. It is also offering its first jet card. The Cirrus SF50 Vision Jet operator officially opens for business in the Golden State with a static display at Hawthorne Airport this Friday. An event in Napa follows.
Richard Kane, Chairman and CEO Steve Clements, COO Steve Wagman, CFO Paula Baumgart, CTO Allison Kane, VP – Marketing Ivan Popov, Chief Pilot Carlos Veliz, Safety Director Jason Bercan, Sales Director Peter Diamandis, Board Member Erik Lindbergh, Board Member David Treitel, Board Member Gene Valentino, Board Member
Headquarters
Miami, Florida
Jet Card Hourly Rates
NA
Related Products
As available starting at $2,500 per hour on a Cirrus SF50 Vision Jet
Founded in 2018 and based in Miami, Florida, VeriJet offers full aircraft charters on the Cirrus SF50 Vision Jet. It launched its service in October 2020. As of March 2021, VeriJet had six SF50s with plans to have 16 by the end of the year and 130 over the next several years. VeriJet offers as available jet cards starting at $2,500 per hour, plus 7.5% FET.
Its current service offering one-way fixed pricing is 600 nautical miles from Orlando, Florida (MCO) and 500 nautical miles from Santa Maria Airport, California (SMX). In July 2021, it launched its service in California. Plans call for expanding to Canada, the Northeastern U.S., and Europe.
VeriJet is included in the Private Jet Card Comparisons’ database of over 50 jet card providers, enabling you to compare programs in minutes.
When was the company founded?
2020
Who owns it?
It's privately held
Who is the CEO?
Richard Kane
How are aircraft sourced?
Owned/Leased fleet
What are the initiation and membership fees?
None
What is its entry-level program?
25 hours at $75,000, plus ET
Is there guaranteed availability?
No
Is the hourly rate guaranteed?
Yes
Can jet card holders/members use multiple aircraft at the same time?
After launching in November in Florida, VeriJet plans to grow to over 130 Cirrus Vision Jets expanding to California, Canada, the Northeast U.S., and Europe
Big plans with small private jets are nothing new. Lookup up DayJet, or for that matter, JetSuite. Both believed very light jets were the skyway to the future. Two decades in the technology side of private aviation have given Richard Kane a first-hand view of failures. The founder and CEO of Boca Raton-based VeriJet says of his venture, “Right airplane, right technology, and right timing.” If he’s right, Verijet may revolutionize the market for flights under 500 miles.