Specifications
AI Description
- Maintenance: Maintained under FAR Part 135; HondaJet FlightReady P3 program.
- Ownership: U.S. Corporate owner.
- Manufacture Date: January 1, 2018.
- Entered into Service: January 1, 2020.
- Engine Model: HF120; TBO of 5000 hours; EMC2 maintenance program.
- Avionics:
- Garmin G3000 avionics package.
- Dual Garmin GIA-63W communication and navigation radios.
- Garmin GFC-715 enhanced AFCS autopilot and flight director.
- Iridium SATCOM.
- Garmin Class B TAWS and GTS-855 TCAS.
- Dual Garmin GTX-33D transponders with extended squitter.
- Garmin GWX-70 weather radar.
- Features: Equipped with high-speed data/Wi-Fi, winglets, engine and airframe maintenance programs, advanced performance modification group, speed brakes; standard RVSM, ice protection, terrain awareness, traffic collision avoidance, ADS-B capability, weather radar, and synthetic vision system.
- Interior: Executive configuration for 5 passengers; parchment leather interior; forward side-facing seat and 4-place club seating; Gogo AVANCE L3 Wi-Fi.
- Exterior: White with blue and orange stripes.
About this Model
Overview
The HondaJet HA-420 is a very light jet designed around two core aims: personal-use practicality and efficient point-to-point travel between smaller airports. Its over-the-wing engine mount configuration supports a roomy cabin for the category and helps keep the aircraft compact on the ramp. Typical use cases include day trips and regional legs where quick turnarounds, single-pilot workflow, and access to shorter runways are priorities.
Mission Fit
Best suited to short-to-midrange sectors where the aircraft can capitalize on higher cruise speeds than turboprops and faster climb to the mid-30s/low-40s flight levels. The cabin and baggage capability work well for light-packing business travel or couples/families on weekend trips, but missions with consistently full seats and bulky bags can push beyond its comfortable envelope.
Cabin
For a VLJ, the HA-420 emphasizes usable cabin volume and a refined layout, typically with a forward refreshment area and an enclosed lavatory. Seating is commonly arranged in a club configuration that supports face-to-face conversation, with cabin comfort most noticeable on 1–2 hour legs. Like most jets in this size class, standing room is limited and aisle space is narrow, so the experience is strongest when passenger count is kept modest.