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Jettly vs NetJets vs Flexjet: What Actually Changes

Private aviation programs may look similar on the surface, but the underlying models are fundamentally different. Understanding those differences matters most once flying patterns change — which they almost always do.

This page breaks down how Jettly, NetJets, and Flexjet compare where it counts.

Contract Length & Commitment

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Multi-year commitments (often 5–10 years)
  • Obligations persist regardless of actual usage
  • Programs assume stable, long-term flying behavior

Jettly

  • No multi-year ownership-style contracts
  • Access without long-term commitment
  • Designed for changing travel needs over time

What changes:
With Jettly, access adapts to your life — not the other way around.

Capital Required (Upfront & Ongoing)

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Significant upfront capital
  • Ongoing management, operating, and program fees
  • Capital remains exposed even during low-usage periods

Jettly

  • No aircraft equity purchase
  • No depreciation exposure
  • Pay for access and flying, not idle assets

What changes:
Capital stays liquid instead of being locked into an aircraft share.

Fleet Flexibility

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Limited to owned or controlled fleet
  • Aircraft availability tied to fleet mix
  • Less flexibility across missions and regions

Jettly

  • Access to a global network of licensed operators
  • Aircraft matched per mission
  • Ability to scale up or down by trip

What changes:
The aircraft fits the mission — not the program.

Ability to Stop Flying Without Penalty

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Fixed obligations regardless of usage
  • Reduced flying does not reduce capital exposure
  • Programs assume consistent utilization

Jettly

  • No obligation to “fly enough”
  • No penalties for changes in travel volume
  • Designed for fluctuating schedules

What changes:
You’re not pressured to fly just to justify sunk costs.

What Happens If Usage Drops

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Unused hours still represent paid capital
  • Carrying costs continue
  • Value recovery depends on resale timing and demand

Jettly

  • No unused ownership hours
  • No depreciation risk
  • Reduced flying simply means reduced spend

What changes:
Lower usage doesn’t create financial drag.

Exit Friction

NetJets / Flexjet

  • Resale process required to exit
  • Timing and valuation risk
  • Administrative and market friction

Jettly

  • No aircraft share to unwind
  • No resale process
  • Clean exit without market dependency

What changes:
Leaving doesn’t require finding a buyer.

The Structural Difference

Fractional ownership programs were designed for a time when access was scarce and flexibility was secondary. Modern private aviation prioritizes adaptability, capital efficiency, and optionality.

That’s the difference between ownership-era programs and access-first models.

Next Step

If you’re evaluating whether long-term fractional ownership still fits how you fly today, explore how modern private jet access works — and why many travelers are making the switch.

Learn how Jettly works

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