Buying a private jet gets all the attention. The aircraft selection, the pre-buy inspection, the negotiation, the handshake. But the 90 days that follow the purchase are where most new owners get blindsided. In Asia, where aviation regulations vary sharply by jurisdiction, where aircraft registries carry very different implications, and where the gap between “I own a jet” and “I can fly my jet” is wider than most brokers will tell you, the post-purchase period is a complex operational and financial sprint. Understanding what to expect during this window is not just useful; it can save you months of grounded frustration and significant unplanned cost.
TL;DR
- The first 90 days after buying a private jet involve regulatory registration, operational approvals, crew setup, insurance binding, and baseline maintenance, not just celebration.
- Private jet ownership costs extend well beyond the purchase price; the first 90 days alone generate a concentrated wave of setup expenditures.
- Choosing the right private jet management company before or immediately after purchase is one of the single highest-leverage decisions a new owner makes.
- Aircraft management fees vary depending on services bundled, aircraft type, and jurisdiction, so understanding fee structures upfront prevents disputes later.
- Aircraft maintenance requirements begin at the point of ownership transfer, not at the next scheduled service interval.
About the Author: This article is written by the advisory team at L’VOYAGE, a government-licensed travel agency and private aviation consultancy headquartered in Hong Kong with over a decade of hands-on experience guiding aircraft owners through acquisition, registration, and ongoing management across the APAC region.
Why Do the First 90 Days Matter More Than the Purchase Itself?
The purchase transaction is finite. The 90 days that follow are dynamic. During this window, a new owner must simultaneously navigate aircraft registration, airworthiness certification, insurance activation, crew compliance, hangarage agreements, and the selection of ongoing operational support. Miss a step or sequence them incorrectly, and the aircraft sits idle. In Asia’s fragmented regulatory landscape, idle can mean weeks, not days.
The post-purchase period is also when the true shape of private jet ownership costs becomes visible. The acquisition price is a one-time figure. What emerges in the first 90 days is the recurring cost architecture you will live with for years [flycraft.com].
What Regulatory Steps Must Be Completed Before the Aircraft Can Fly?
Registration and airworthiness are non-negotiable prerequisites to flight, and in Asia, they are not uniform.
Registration choices and their consequences:
- Aircraft in Asia are commonly registered under Hong Kong (B- prefix), the Isle of Man (M-), Cayman Islands (VP-C), Aruba (P4-), or the owner’s home jurisdiction.
- Each registry carries different airworthiness standards, audit obligations, and bilateral agreements with destination countries.
- Changing registry after purchase is possible but adds weeks and cost. Most experienced advisors recommend confirming the target registry before the sale closes, not after.
Airworthiness certification steps typically include:
- Submission of the previous Certificate of Airworthiness and maintenance records to the new registry authority.
- Physical inspection or records audit by the new authority or its designated representative.
- Issuance of a new Certificate of Airworthiness under the new registry.
- Verification that all outstanding Airworthiness Directives (ADs) and Service Bulletins (SBs) have been actioned.
Regulatory timelines in APAC vary considerably. Hong Kong and Cayman registrations are generally regarded as efficient, but any registry transfer requires a realistic buffer of four to eight weeks depending on aircraft type and completeness of documentation.
It is also worth noting that some jurisdictions have tightened operational permit requirements significantly. Singapore, for example, now mandates that aircraft listed on an Air Operator Certificate must hold both a valid Foreign Aircraft Operating Certificate and a permit to operate before any flight into Singapore, with no exemptions for ferry or positioning flights [ops.group]. New owners planning APAC routes should factor destination-specific permit requirements into their 90-day planning, not just their home registry obligations.
How Should You Structure Aircraft Management From Day One?
Selecting a private jet management company is the most consequential operational decision in the first 90 days [blackjet.com].
What a management company actually does:
- Manages airworthiness and coordinates with the registry authority on your behalf.
- Schedules and oversees all maintenance in compliance with the manufacturer’s approved maintenance programme.
- Handles crew recruitment, training qualification checks, and roster management.
- Manages AOC inclusion if the owner wishes to charter the aircraft to offset costs.
- Administers fuel, handling, permits, and trip support logistics.
- Provides financial reporting on all operational expenditures.
Understanding aircraft management fees:
Aircraft management fees are structured in several layers, and conflating them causes budget surprises [wealthbriefingasia.com]:
| Fee Type | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Fixed monthly management fee | Core administration, airworthiness oversight, regulatory liaison |
| Crew costs | Salaries, training recurrencies, medicals, accommodation, per diem |
| Maintenance reserves | Accruals per flight hour toward scheduled overhauls (engines, APU, landing gear) |
| Variable trip costs | Fuel, handling fees, overflight permits, catering, ground transport |
| AOC/wet lease fees | Charged when the aircraft is placed on charter to third parties |
The fixed monthly management fee is often the number owners focus on, but crew costs and maintenance reserves frequently exceed it on an annual basis. When comparing proposals from management companies, require a full total cost of ownership model, not just the headline management fee.
What Are the Aircraft Maintenance Requirements in the First 90 Days?
Aircraft maintenance requirements do not pause for the ownership transition [flycraft.com]. Several specific obligations activate at the point of purchase:
- Entry into service inspection: Even if the aircraft has a clean maintenance history, most operators conduct an independent entry-into-service check when taking on a new aircraft under management.
- Maintenance programme enrollment: The aircraft must be formally enrolled in an approved maintenance programme aligned to the new registry’s requirements.
- AD and SB compliance audit: All open Airworthiness Directives must be reviewed and any near-due items addressed before the aircraft operates under the new owner.
- Avionics and equipment compliance: Depending on intended routes, avionics upgrades (such as ADS-B Out compliance, FANS capability for oceanic routes) may be required.
Maintenance reserves deserve particular attention. These are not optional charges. They are accruals per flight hour that fund future major overhauls. Failing to establish proper reserves from the first flight creates a significant liability when major maintenance events occur [blackjet.com].
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it realistically take to fly my newly purchased private jet in Asia?
With all documentation complete and registry transfer proceeding smoothly, most owners achieve first flight within six to twelve weeks of purchase. Complex registry changes or incomplete maintenance records can extend this to four months.
What are the biggest unexpected private jet ownership costs in the first year?
Unplanned maintenance findings from the entry-into-service inspection, crew training recurrency costs, and hangarage fees in space-constrained airports (common in Hong Kong and other APAC hubs) consistently surprise first-time owners [flycraft.com].
Can I charter my aircraft to offset costs immediately after purchase?
Not immediately. The aircraft must first be placed on an Air Operator Certificate, which requires regulatory approval, insurance alignment, and in some jurisdictions, specific crew qualifications. This process typically takes two to four months [jethunter.aero].
How do I evaluate aircraft management fees from competing providers?
Request a 12-month total cost projection broken down by fixed fees, crew costs, maintenance reserves, and estimated variable trip costs. Never compare headline management fees in isolation.
What insurance coverage is required from day one of ownership?
At minimum: hull all-risk coverage for the full agreed value of the aircraft, aviation third-party liability at limits appropriate for intended operations, and passenger liability. War risk coverage is increasingly standard for APAC operations.
Do I need a separate crew before I take delivery?
Yes, if the aircraft will be owner-operated or commercially operated. Crew hiring, type rating verification, and medical compliance should begin before the purchase closes, not after [wealthbriefingasia.com].
What is the role of a private jet management company versus a broker?
A broker facilitates the purchase transaction. A management company operates the aircraft on an ongoing basis. They are distinct services. Some consultancies, including those with deep advisory capabilities, can provide continuity across both phases.
About L’VOYAGE
L’VOYAGE is a government-licensed travel agency and private aviation consultancy headquartered in Hong Kong, with offices across Hong Kong, Shenzhen, Kuala Lumpur, and the APAC region. Founded in 2014 and led by CEO Jolie Howard, a seasoned aviation executive with over 20 years of industry experience, L’VOYAGE provides expert guidance across the full aircraft ownership lifecycle: from acquisition advisory and registry selection through to ongoing management, charter placement, and airworthiness oversight. For new and prospective aircraft owners navigating the complexity of post-purchase operations in Asia, L’VOYAGE’s Private Aviation Advisory division offers the structured, experience-backed support that transforms a grounded asset into a fully operational aircraft.
If you are approaching or have recently completed an aircraft purchase in Asia and want a clear-eyed view of what comes next, speak with the advisory team at L’VOYAGE. Visit https://www.lvoyage.aero/ to get in touch.