At ~4,746 nm, Los Angeles–Tokyo sits right at the edge of the Gulfstream G500's ~5,200 nm range. It can make the crossing nonstop in favorable winds and with a lighter load, but westbound headwinds or a full cabin may force a fuel stop — confirm the specific date and payload with your operator.
Range vs. Distance
| Measure | Value |
|---|---|
| Los Angeles → Tokyo (great circle) | ~4,746 nm |
| Gulfstream G500 range | ~5,200 nm |
| Margin | 454 nm to spare |
| Aircraft class | heavy jet |
Book range (NBAA IFR) already includes fuel reserves, but westbound headwinds effectively add distance — which is why a route near the edge of an aircraft's range is treated as conditional rather than a guaranteed nonstop. The operating crew calculates final fuel for the specific date, winds, and payload.
Comparing aircraft? See the Aircraft Capability hub, the longest-range private jets, or the Gulfstream G500 specifications.
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends. At ~4,746 nm, Los Angeles–Tokyo sits right at the edge of the Gulfstream G500's ~5,200 nm range. It can make the crossing nonstop in favorable winds and with a lighter load, but westbound headwinds or a full cabin may force a fuel stop — confirm the specific date and payload with your operator.
The great-circle distance is about 4,746 nautical miles. Real flight plans run a little longer because of routing and winds, and westbound legs effectively add distance against the prevailing flow.
About 5,200 nautical miles (NBAA IFR). That is enough for long intercontinental routes nonstop.
Roughly 10h 49m of block time, varying with winds and routing. Westbound legs against the prevailing winds run longer than eastbound.
Flying Los Angeles to Tokyo?
We'll match the right aircraft for the mission — nonstop where the range allows, or a smart one-stop when it doesn't — with vetted operators and transparent pricing.