Aircraft Finder

BEECHCRAFT PREMIER I(2004)

Specifications

Year2004
Serial NumberRB-118
RegistrationN452KT
Total Hours3,020
LocationFAYETTEVILLE, ARKANSAS
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

Valor Jets, Inc.

Visit website sales@valorjets.com

Aircraft Details

  • Model: Beechcraft Premier I
  • Condition: Used
  • Flight Rules: IFR
  • Advanced composite fuselage for improved aerodynamics and fuel efficiency
  • Largest cabin in its category: 5'5" high by 5'6" wide
  • Avionics: Collins Pro Line 21 suite with IFIS-5000, XM Weather, Synthetic Vision, ADS-B, and TCAS II
  • Engines: Two Williams FJ44-2A, low fuel burn, 5000 TBO
  • Max Takeoff Weight: 12,500 lb
  • Interior: Six-passenger layout with Tan leather seating, Mahogany veneer cabinetry, and fully enclosed aft lavatory
  • Features: Forward galley, dual executive tables, PRIZIM LED wireless lighting, 110V outlets
  • Exterior: Matterhorn White with Black undercarriage and Red accents, painted in 2025
  • Maintenance: CAMP tracking, recent inspections completed, TAP Blue engine maintenance program
  • Equipped with oxygen system and heated baggage compartment

About this Model

Overview

The Beechcraft Premier I is a light business jet designed around fast regional and short cross-country travel with a relatively tall cabin compared with many contemporaries. It targets owner-operators and small teams that value jet speed and altitude capability without moving into the higher operating footprint of midsize aircraft. Typical use cases include day trips between regional business centers, two- to four-passenger legs with bags, and occasional longer segments with a fuel stop depending on winds and payload.

Mission Fit

The Premier I fits missions where time savings from jet cruise and the ability to top weather matter more than maximizing cabin volume. It works well for point-to-point legs in the roughly 300–1,000 nm range with comfortable reserves; longer missions are feasible but become more sensitive to payload, winds, and routing. If your typical flights involve full seats, heavy baggage, or routinely pushing range limits, larger light jets or small midsize jets tend to be a better match.

Cabin

The cabin is notable in the light-jet segment for its height and generally comfortable seating geometry, supporting productive travel for a small group. Expect a classic light-jet environment: compact galley provisions, an aft lavatory arrangement, and limited baggage accessibility in flight depending on configuration. Cabin comfort is strongest when passenger count is modest and baggage is managed to stay within weight-and-balance constraints.