Buying or owning a private aircraft isn’t about chasing specs — it’s about understanding how an airplane actually fits into real-world missions, operating costs, and ownership expectations.
The aircraft model pages on SkyGoFly are designed to help you do exactly that. Each page focuses on how a specific aircraft is actually used, where buyers tend to misunderstand it, and what matters most once the purchase excitement wears off.
These are not sales pages. They’re meant to feel like a conversation with an experienced aviation advisor — clear, grounded, and realistic.
How to Use These Pages
Each aircraft model page is written to:
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Provide operational context, not brochure language
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Highlight tradeoffs and ownership realities
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Reduce uncertainty before you speak with a broker
If you’re early in your research, these pages will help you narrow your thinking.
If you’re already serious, they’ll help you ask better questions.
Aircraft Families Currently Covered
We’re rolling this out deliberately, starting with aircraft families where buyer confusion — and costly misunderstandings — are common.
Cessna Citation Series
A broad family of light and midsize jets with significant variation between models. Our pages focus on where those differences matter in real-world use.Embraer Business Jets
Known for strong cabins and mission flexibility, Embraer aircraft often appeal to owner-operators and experienced buyers alike. Our coverage reflects how these aircraft perform beyond the spec sheet.
Each family page links to individual model breakdowns so you can go deeper where it matters most.
A Note on Scope
You’ll notice this isn’t an exhaustive aircraft directory — and that’s intentional.
Coverage will expand over time, but only where we can provide clear, experience-backed insight. The goal isn’t to list every airplane ever built; it’s to help serious buyers make fewer mistakes and better decisions.