Why Block Charter Matters
Block Charter is relevant to anyone evaluating aircraft ownership versus charter. The ownership path — full purchase, fractional share, lease, or partnership — each involves specific applications of Block Charter that affect your total cost of ownership and operational flexibility.
Related Terms
Frequently Asked Questions
8 questions about Block Charter
A block charter agreement reserves a specific aircraft or crew for a series of flights over a defined period, often at a discounted rate compared to individual bookings.
Block Charter directly influences operational decisions in private aviation. Whether it affects routing, pricing, aircraft selection, or regulatory compliance, awareness of Block Charter helps charter clients evaluate proposals and operators with greater precision.
Block Charter may affect charter pricing through its influence on operational requirements, aircraft availability, or regulatory compliance costs. The specific impact depends on your route, aircraft type, and timing.
The core concept behind Block Charter is recognized internationally, but implementation varies. The FAA, EASA, and national aviation authorities each apply their own regulations, which means Block Charter may carry different specific requirements depending on where you're operating.
The Jet Finder's aviation glossary covers 200+ terms. For specific questions about how Block Charter affects your charter or acquisition, contact our team directly.
No — your broker and operator handle the technical details. But understanding Block Charter helps you evaluate what you're paying for, ask informed questions, and distinguish between operators who meet minimum standards and those who exceed them.
In the United States, the FAA sets standards related to Block Charter through Federal Aviation Regulations (FARs). In Europe, EASA provides the regulatory framework. Internationally, ICAO establishes the baseline standards that member states adopt and enforce.
Yes. Our aviation advisors can explain how Block Charter applies to your specific situation, whether you're chartering, buying, or selling an aircraft.
Our Team Can Help
Whether you're chartering for the first time or evaluating an acquisition, our aviation advisors speak your language.