Specifications
Aircraft Details
- Model: Beechcraft King Air 250
- Condition: Used
- Airframe Total Time: 2,923 hours
- Total Cycles: 3,560
- Engine 1 Time: 2,923 hours since new (SNEW)
- Engine 1 TBO: 3,600 hours
- Avionics: Rockwell Collins Pro Line 21
- WAAS and LPV capabilities: Yes
- Avionics/Radios: FMS, Skywatch TCAS, ADF/DME, ELT 406, Collins Electronic Charts, TAWS+, DBU – 5000 Data Loader, CVR, XM Satellite Graphical Weather
- Exterior: Overall Matterhorn White with Reflex Blue and Medium Gray stripes
- Interior: Standard King Air interior with 4 executive club seats and 2 aft-facing executive seats
- Features: Belted flushing toilet, four 115v cabin electrical outlets
- Headliner: Tumbleweed Shimmer Fabric
- Sidewalls: Wheat Leather
- Floor Covering: Fawn Groovy Carpet
- Laminate: Tuscan Olivewood
- Cabin Seats: Wheat Leather with Champagne seat belts
- Modifications: Raisbeck Wing Locker System
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.