
Specifications
AI Description
- Passenger Capacity: 14 passengers, forward galley floorplan.
- Engine Maintenance: Fresh mid-life/10-year engines due November 2025.
- Ownership History: One U.S. owner and one Canadian owner since April 2023; always hangared, no incidents.
- Inspection Status: 96-month inspection completed in November 2024 at Gulfstream Brunswick.
- Engines: Two Rolls-Royce Tay MK 611-8C engines, each with 2,001 hours and 923 cycles.
- APU: Honeywell 36-150, total time since new: 1,420 hours, 1,850 cycles.
- Avionics: PlaneView Enhanced Navigation Package, dual Honeywell systems for EFIS, GPS, and autopilot; ADS-B Out equipped.
- Additional Features: Enhanced Vision System, Synthetic Vision, Gogo ATG-5000 high-speed internet, and a SecuraPlane security system with three external cameras.
- Interior: New interior as of August 2016, features include a forward galley with various appliances, sleeping accommodations for 6, and multiple entertainment systems.
- Exterior: New exterior as of August 2016, Matterhorn white with orange and blue stripes.
About this Model
Overview
The Gulfstream G450 is a long-range, large-cabin business jet positioned for nonstop international sectors, high-altitude cruise, and consistent mission flexibility across a wide payload range. It builds on the GV/SP family with a cabin sized for multi-zone seating and sleeping options, and operating characteristics that many flight departments consider straightforward for the category. Buyer interest typically centers on its combination of range, baggage volume, and a cabin that supports productive work and rest on extended legs.
Mission Fit
The G450 tends to fit owners and departments planning regular long legs—often international—where time savings come from avoiding fuel stops and where cabin comfort during extended cruise is a priority. It is less compelling when missions are predominantly short and frequent, or when the acquisition intent is to standardize on the latest cockpit/cabin tech baseline without retrofits.
Cabin
The cabin is designed around a long, relatively wide cross-section that supports two main seating zones and an aft area that can be configured for additional seating or sleeping, depending on the individual aircraft. A forward galley arrangement is common, with an enclosed lavatory aft and a large baggage compartment that is typically accessible in flight on many configurations, supporting long-range travel needs. Overall comfort is influenced by specific interior completion, refurbishment history, and connectivity upgrades rather than the airframe alone.