Aircraft Finder

BEECHCRAFT KING AIR 250(2011)

BEECHCRAFT KING AIR 250
Asking Price
$3,799,000

Specifications

Year2011
Serial NumberBY-126
RegistrationZS-TEG
Total Hours2,580
LocationSOUTHERN AFRICA, SOUTH AFRICA
RegionAFRICA

Broker

Guardian Jet, LLC

Visit website

AI Description

  • One owner since new
  • Equipped with Collins Pro Line 21 avionics
  • BLR winglets installed
  • Raisbeck RAM air recovery system
  • Four-blade Hartzell composite propellers
  • Dual aft folding seats
  • TCAS 7.1 and ADS-B Out equipped
  • XM weather capability
  • Spacious cabin configured for nine passengers
  • Interior features: 2 aft-facing seats, 4-place club arrangement, belted side-facing lavatory, removable dual aft folding seats in baggage area
  • Max takeoff weight: 12,500 lb
  • Engines: Pratt & Whitney PT6A-52 with 3,600 TBO
  • Total time on engines: 2,579.7 hours since new
  • Aft lavatory included
  • Exterior color: Matterhorn white with metallic black and gold accent striping
  • Airframe maintenance program: CASP (Corporate Aircraft Service Program)
  • Equipped with terrain awareness and warning system (TAWS)
  • Equipped with emergency locator transmitter (ELT) and cockpit voice recorder (CVR)

About this Model

Overview

The King Air 250 is a pressurized, twin‑engine turboprop positioned between legacy King Air utility and light-jet-like mission capability. It emphasizes flexible airport access (including shorter runways), strong climb and cruise performance for a turboprop, and a modern cockpit suite geared toward single-pilot or two-pilot operations depending on equipment and operator requirements. Buyers typically consider it when they want reliable regional-to-midrange trip capability with the ability to operate into airports that may be impractical for many jets.

Mission Fit

The aircraft fits missions where schedule reliability, runway access, and climb to weather-avoiding altitudes matter more than maximum cruise speed. It is well suited to multi-stop days and destinations with limited infrastructure. If your trip profile is dominated by longer stage lengths where time-to-arrival is the overriding driver, a jet may better match expectations.

Cabin

The King Air 250 cabin is pressurized with a typical club-seating business layout, a belted lavatory area in many configurations, and a practical baggage solution suited to regional travel. Compared with many light jets, the turboprop cabin experience can include more noticeable propeller/engine noise and vibration, though comfort is highly dependent on specific interior, soundproofing options, and prop balance/maintenance. The main value is a usable cabin for teams and clients combined with the ability to use smaller airports and shorter runways.