Since the spring of 2020, about the last place in the world where anyone has wanted to be is inside a major airport, waiting to board a jumbo jet. Of all the locations where you might catch a lethal airborne virus, the place that makes you wait in long lines; that can lock you in crowded terminals with the exhaled breath of thousands for hours; and that packs you into a flying sardine can with hundreds of people is bound to rank pretty low on most people’s list—somewhere between “rush hour subway car” and “sold out arena rock concert.”
For that reason, private air travel—despite its high cost—has found an eager audience among cautious travelers. The appeal is obvious: No waiting in airport lines, anxiously trying to maintain social distance. No taking off your belt and shoes. And while any public activity during a pandemic is risky, many travelers are attracted to the theoretically safer private option. The Austria-based charter airline GlobeAir issued a study claiming that a passenger traveling on a commercial aircraft has 700 potentially infectious encounters; on a private jet, the company says, it’s 20.
So, while fewer people overall have been flying since early 2020, the percentage of flyers choosing private jets has gone up. As a result, 2020 was not the disastrous year for private aviation one might have predicted. In 2019, the size of the U.S. private aviation market was estimated at between $25 and $30 billion. 2020 was no doubt a year of shrinkage; some companies have indicated that in the spring of 2020, as the pandemic lockdowns kicked in, business fell to 10 percent of its 2019 level, akin to the dramatic drop-off in commercial travel.




