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CESSNA CITATION LATITUDE(2016)

Specifications

Year2016
Serial Number680A-0067
RegistrationN518KB
Total Hours3,353
LocationUnited States
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

OGARAJETS LLC

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Connor Bianco

connorbianco@ogarajets.com

Aircraft Details

• U.S. pedigree since new; Part 135 operated and maintained

• Fully enrolled on ProParts (airframe), PowerAdvantage+ (engines), and AuxAdvantage (APU) programs

• Maintenance tracking via CAMP

• Airframe: 3,353 hours, 1,939 landings

• Engines: 2x PW306D1, both with 3,353 hours and 1,939 cycles since new

• APU: Honeywell RE100CS, 2,172 hours, enrolled on AuxAdvantage

• Garmin G5000 integrated avionics suite with synthetic vision, electronic charts, WAAS/LPV, cockpit voice recorder

• Gogo AVANCE L5 Wi-Fi, forward bulkhead monitor

• Interior: 8 passengers (includes belted aft lavatory), forward side-facing seat, 4-place club, 2 aft forward-facing seats, forward galley, externally serviceable aft lavatory with sink and vanity

• Exterior: Snow white with starlight silver and viper red accents (2016)

• Recent/Upcoming Inspections: DOC 3 (24-mo) and DOC 11 (60-mo) due Dec 2026; DOC 15 (3,600-hr) due at 3,600 hours

About this Model

Overview

The Citation Latitude sits between traditional midsize and larger super-midsize jets, pairing a wide, flat-floor cabin with operating habits that remain close to the Citation family’s straightforward dispatch and training profile. It is commonly selected for coast-to-coast U.S. missions with reserves and for international segments where airport access, predictable climb performance, and passenger comfort matter more than maximum-range specialization.

Mission Fit

Latitude’s sweet spot is repeatable day-to-day flying where trip lengths are long enough to benefit from a stand-up cabin but not so long that a dedicated long-range platform becomes necessary. For buyers who routinely load the cabin to capacity and still need longest-range legs, mission planning may require additional fuel stops or payload/range compromises depending on conditions.

Cabin

The cabin is known for its width and flat floor, supporting comfortable single-aisle movement and a “large-cabin” feel for a super-midsize. Typical layouts place a forward galley and a side-facing or belted lavatory aft, with a club seating core that works well for meetings and laptop use. Baggage access is usually strong for this class, and the pressurization and sound levels are oriented toward longer legs where passenger fatigue becomes noticeable.