Aircraft Finder

PIPER M600 SLS(2022)

Asking Price
$3,275,000

Specifications

Year2022
Serial Number48291
RegistrationN182KT
Total Hours590
LocationSAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
RegionNORTH AMERICA

Broker

Jet Aviation Brokers

John Carter

Aircraft Details

  • Model: PIPER M600 SLS
  • Engine: Pratt & Whitney PT6A-42A
  • Propeller: Hartzell 5-blade
  • Flight Rules: IFR
  • Avionics: Garmin (including GTX345R, GTX335R, GWX-8000, GTS-855 TCAS)
  • ADS-B equipped, WAAS, LPV, SVT
  • Features: Wi-Fi, pressurized cabin, FIKI (Flight Into Known Icing), RVSM certified
  • Interior: 2022 upgrades, 6 seats, executive configuration, copilot reclining seat, USB power ports, LEMO jacks
  • Exterior: Painted in 2022, Snow White and Nordic Gray with yellow trim stripes
  • Warranty: Engine warranty until 2029, general warranty until 2027
  • Maintenance: Immaculately maintained, complete logbooks, annual inspection due March 2026
  • Additional equipment: Large-capacity battery, improved nose landing gear, upgraded wing spar, improved oxygen cabinet

About this Model

Overview

The Piper M600/SLS is a pressurized, single-engine turboprop positioned between high-end pistons and entry-level light jets for buyers prioritizing simplified operation, runway flexibility, and contemporary safety automation. The SLS (Safe Landing System) variant centers the aircraft around Garmin’s Autoland capability, pairing it with a high-integration avionics suite and a cabin sized for practical regional missions with family, colleagues, or a small team.

Mission Fit

In day-to-day use, the M600/SLS fits missions where a single pilot wants turbine reliability and speed without stepping into jet operating complexity. It is typically chosen for point-to-point regional travel, mixed weather flying with IFR avionics, and destinations where runway length and support infrastructure are limited. Mission planning should account for passenger count, fuel, and baggage tradeoffs common to single-engine turboprops.

Cabin

The cabin is arranged as a club-style configuration in a pressurized fuselage with an enclosed feel compared with unpressurized aircraft. Seating and storage are oriented toward practical travel rather than stand-up cabin movement, and comfort is strongly influenced by interior package, seat design, and noise/vibration management typical of turboprops. Access and loading are straightforward for small groups and normal travel baggage, with best comfort realized when passenger count is kept to a manageable level for the stage length.