Falcon 8X


Choose up to three aircraft, enter a real route, and compare the cabin, mission fit, performance, and live empty leg inventory.



Mission fit includes a planning margin but is not a flight-performance calculation. Operator dispatch must verify weather, payload, runway, reserves, and the specific aircraft.



A useful private jet comparison starts with the airport pair, not the aircraft category. Enter the route and passenger count first, then compare range with a planning margin. A jet that looks capable on a brochure can still require a fuel stop after baggage, wind, reserves, runway limits, and the exact cabin configuration are included.
Cabin height and width become more important as flight time increases. Compare the to-scale cross-sections, then open the individual aircraft profiles for exterior and interior photos.
Treat maximum range as a screening number. Passenger weight, bags, weather, reserves, and airport performance determine the usable mission. The route marker makes the margin between your trip and each aircraft visible.
The technically perfect jet may not be positioned nearby. Check the live empty leg marketplace or request a charter quote for the selected route.
The best aircraft depends on route distance, passenger and baggage load, runway conditions, weather, and the exact aircraft configuration. Use the mission fit indicators as a shortlist, then have dispatch verify the trip.
No. Published range is measured under stated test assumptions. Actual range changes with payload, wind, routing, reserves, temperature, and aircraft configuration.
Choose departure and arrival airports by city, IATA code, ICAO code, or airport name. The tool calculates great-circle distance automatically, while the manual distance field remains available for airway routing or operational adjustments.
Business jets can have several approved interiors. The comparison uses a practical charter configuration where available, but the assigned aircraft must still be checked for its exact seating and baggage layout.
Cabin height determines whether most passengers can stand, width affects aisle and shoulder room, and cabin length controls how many seating zones fit. The cross-sections above draw height and width on one common scale.
Yes. Each comparison column shows current linked empty leg inventory and connects to the aircraft profile.