There are three common ways to fly private without owning the whole airplane: on-demand charter, a jet card, and fractional ownership. They’re often pitched as competitors, but they really answer different questions — mostly about how often you fly and how much you want to pre-commit. Here’s the honest version.
The short version
| On-demand charter | Jet card | Fractional ownership | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | None | Deposit (often $100k+) | Buy-in for a share (six–seven figures) |
| Commitment | Per trip | Prepaid hours | Multi-year contract |
| Pricing | Per trip, all-in | Fixed hourly, locked | Hourly + monthly management fees |
| Aircraft | Any size, matched per trip | Usually one category | The type you bought into |
| Best for | Occasional to regular flyers who want flexibility | Frequent flyers who value fixed rates | Very frequent flyers (200+ hrs/yr) |
On-demand charter
You book each trip as you need it. No deposit, no membership, no contract — you pay for the flight and that’s the relationship. The advantage is total flexibility: a broker matches the right aircraft to each trip from a large network, so a solo regional hop and a transcontinental family trip can use entirely different (and appropriately priced) airplanes. The trade-off is that pricing moves with the market, so peak dates cost more.
Peak’s model is on-demand charter — with all-inclusive pricing, no membership fees, and built to move fast when plans change. For most people who fly privately a handful of times a year, it’s the most rational option: you get private-jet access without parking capital in a deposit or a share.
Jet card
You prepay for a block of hours at a fixed hourly rate, usually on a defined aircraft category, in exchange for guaranteed availability and simpler booking. Cards make sense for frequent flyers who value rate certainty and don’t want to negotiate each trip. The trade-offs: a sizable deposit sits with the provider, hours can carry peak-day restrictions and expiration, and you’re locked to one category whether or not it fits a given trip.
Fractional ownership
You buy a share of a specific aircraft (say 1/16) and get a set number of hours per year, plus a monthly management fee and an occupied hourly rate. It delivers the most consistency — effectively “your” airplane — and suits very frequent flyers (commonly 200+ hours a year). The trade-offs are the largest: a real capital purchase, multi-year commitment, management fees regardless of how much you fly, and depreciation on the asset.
How to choose
- Fly a few times a year, value flexibility, don’t want to pre-commit → on-demand charter.
- Fly often, want locked rates and fast guaranteed sourcing → jet card.
- Fly very often and want one consistent aircraft program → fractional.
There’s no universally “best” option — only the one that fits your flight frequency and how much you want to tie up in advance. If you’re not flying enough to justify a six-figure commitment, charter gets you the same cabins and the same safety vetting without the strings.
Frequently asked questions
Is charter cheaper than a jet card or fractional?
For occasional and many regular flyers, yes — there’s no deposit, buy-in, or management fee. Cards and fractional can be more cost-efficient only at high annual hours.
Do I need a membership to charter with Peak?
No. No membership fees, no annual dues, no initiation costs. You can request a quote and book a single trip.
Which is safest?
Safety comes from the operator and vetting, not the ownership model. Peak flies only ARGUS- or Wyvern-certified operators, with an ARGUS TripCheq or Wyvern assessment before every departure — regardless of how you book.
What if I’m not sure how much I’ll fly?
Start with on-demand charter. It carries no commitment, so you can learn your real flying pattern before considering a card or share. Request a quote →
Buy the flight, not the obligation.
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