Private jet

Private jet tours: lavish, luxe and, for some, a good value

My story this week for CNBC is all about ultra-luxe private jet tours.

Here are the details. Start saving your pennies…

There’s luxury travel and then there’s super-luxury travel.

And by any measure, touring the world on a specially outfitted private jet with 15 to 50 like-minded passengers all on the same financial playing field falls into the “ultra-luxe” category.

It’s not for everyone, of course. But for well-to-do, worldly travelers with destinations and experiences still on their bucket lists, joining a private jet tour is a popular way to efficiently explore the world in the lap of luxury.

These all-inclusive trips can cost more than $100,000 per person, “But the level of care, the food and beverage offerings and the special amenities and white glove services are top of the line,” said Becky Powell, President of Protravel International, “What really makes these journeys special is the ability to visit many exotic and off-the-beaten track destinations, stay in unique high-end accommodations and have access to curated, insider experiences.”

Sound like your kind of travel? Here are some private jet journeys to consider.

Culture, education and convenience

National Geographic Private Jet Expeditions and Smithsonian Journeys offer tours for the high-end market that focus on education and culture, said Julie Danziger, managing partner at adventure travel company, Embark, “With the big draw being the specialty guides and the people hosting the tours.”

National Geographic Private Jet Expeditions:

Trips start at: $78, 945 per person.

In the air: A Boeing 757 jet with 48-75 leather seats (depending on the trip) in a 2×2 configuration. Crew includes an expedition chef, catering officer and dedicated luggage handler.

On the ground: Itineraries include Africa, Central and South America, Around the World

Smithsonian Journeys

Trips start at: $85,950 per person.  

In the air: Boeing 757 custom-configured jet with 76 business-class seats

On the ground: Itineraries include Around the World, including Machu Picchu, Easter Island, Samoa, Petra, Marrakech.

Four Seasons Private Jet Experience

When Michael Petrina got an email describing a Four Seasons’ tour, he thought it was “ridiculously extravagant and crazy.” But the retired lawyer analyzed the offer and now he and his spouse are packing for their fourth Four Seasons private jet tour. “It’s definitely an investment,” said Petrina, “But you’re given the opportunity to see remote places you wouldn’t go on your own and in a very comfortable fashion.”

Trips start at: $163,000 per person; 21 – 24 days.

In the air: Customized Boeing 757 jet with 52-flat Italian leather flat-bed seats. A new Airbus A321neo with 48 seats and a social space for workshops and classes will debut in 2021.

“We consider the airplane to be our 116th hotel and these trips an extension of our brand,” said Javier Loureiro, Director of Guest Experience on the Four Seasons jet.

On the ground: Itineraries include the International Intrigue tour, with 9 destinations, including Kyoto, Serengeti, Budapest, St. Petersburg and Paris, with accommodations at Four Seasons hotels.

Abercrombie and Kent

In addition to fine dining, curated cultural events and an executive chef, a bonus on Abercrombie and Kent’s around-the-world private jet tours is that they’re hosted by company founder and co-chairman Geoffrey Kent.

“Guests on these kinds of adventures take pleasure in meeting like-minded people with a shared curiosity about the world,” said Kent, “We also find that once-in-a-lifetime trips, such as a Private Jet Journey, tends to attract more solo travelers as well. I believe this is due to the unique destinations visited on these trips, as well as the length of the programs.”

Trips start at: $32, 495 (regional) and $160,000 per person (Around the World)

In the air: Chartered Boeing 757 with 50-custom-designed Italian leather fully lie-flat seats. One cabin attendant for every seven guests and a dedicated luggage manager.

On the ground: Regional Wings Over the World Journeys (13-16 guests) and Around the World with Geoffrey Kent tours (48 guests)  

Remote Lands

On Aman Private Jet Expeditions, operated by Remote Lands, groups of about 16 guests travel by small private jets to exotic locations in Asia (and sometimes Europe) and stay exclusively in hotels and resorts within the luxury Aman chain. During the day, guests have private cars and guides; evenings feature lavish dinners and cocktail parties.

“Going with a small group of like-minded people is a lot of fun,” said Catherine Heald, Remote Lands co-founder and CEO, “If you just go with your spouse it’s not going to be the same kind of party.”

Trips start at: $60,000

In the air: Airbus 318s and chartered business jets with living-room like interiors.

On the ground: The Grandest Tour ($128,000 per person) is a 9-country, 21-night tour to Japan, China, Vietnam, Thailand, Bhutan, India, Greece, Montenegro and Italy.

TCS World Travel

A  leader in private jet touring, TCS World Travel partners with Smithsonian Journeys, Four Season and others but also offers its own regionally focused adventures and around-the-world journeys.

As with most trips mentioned here, “all-inclusive” covers private chartered jets, first-class accommodations, ground transportation, meals and beverages, sightseeing and special access visits, luggage handling, gratuities and a team that includes a trip physician.

Prices start at: $72, 950

In the air: Boeing 757 and mid-sized private jets, such as the A318-100 and Bombardier Challenger series.

On the ground: Regionally focused adventures and around-the-world journeys. A President’s Journey Around the World (favorite sites of company president Shelley Cline) is $134,000 per person and will visit 7 destinations in 24 days.

Red Savannah

Courtesy White Desert

A new Antarctic itinerary from luxury travel company Red Savannah makes great use of private jets. Antarctica by Private Jet includes roundtrip transfers from Cape Town to Antarctica as well as flights in Antarctica to/from the South Pole and to/from an Emperor Penguin Colony.

Prices start at: $96,000

In the air: Small private jets carry guests fly from Cape Town, South Africa to an exclusive private jet runway in Antarctica.

On the ground: Antarctica by Private jet trip includes visits to an Emperor Penguin colony, trekking and exploring ice tunnels, spending a night in the South Pole and staying in a private sleeping pod. 

Crystal Skye

Most people associate Crystal with its luxury cruise line, but in 2017 the company debuted Crystal Skye, a lavishly transformed Boeing 777 aircraft with 88 lie-flat seats, a bar and social lounge, and an in-flight crew with an executive chef.

Scheduled private jet tours didn’t pan out, but now Crystal AirCruises offers the plane as the world’s largest private jet for charter.

“Sports teams have rented the plane, and we’ve had weddings and bar mitzvahs on board,” said Richard Ziskind, Vice President & Managing Director of Crystal AirCruises, “We also had a couple celebrate their anniversary by renting one of Crystal’s yachts and renting the plane to take their guests to parties in two cities.”

Price to charter: $350,000 to over $1 million.

Private jet travel – on a budget

 

How’s this for a sweet airfare deal: $499 for all four seats on a private jet from Santa Monica, Calif., to Las Vegas. Drinks and refreshments included. You choose the departure time.

That was the offer made by JetSuite, a West Coast charter-jet company, last week on Facebook and Twitter for a flight the following day.

There were a few catches: Only one flight was available, it was one way and it was subject to 7.5 percent federal excise tax.

But for a flexible traveler going that way, perhaps with a few friends or business colleagues to help split the bill, the last-minute deal offered a chance to experience private jet travel without having to pay per-hour flight costs that, industry-wide, can range from $2,500 to $8,000 per hour.

Like other private, on-demand charter jet companies, JetSuite (created by JetBlue founder Alex Wilcox) offers membership programs for customers willing to put down cash in exchange for guaranteed rates. But although JetSuite’s best membership plan claims to offer the industry’s lowest rate (“only $2,975 per hour”) and private jet travel offers clear benefits over commercial airplanes (faster travel, no security checks, plush seating and luxury amenities, to name just a few), this sort of travel is likely remain the bailiwick of corporate executives, celebrities and the super rich.

Still, to expand the number of people who might someday consider booking a private jet, JetSuite has turned to social media to fill empty seats and broaden the market.

Each day between 4 and 6 p.m., JetSuite sends out a message on Twitter telling followers that the company has posted the next day’s $499 SuiteDeals on Facebook. Most last-minute, one-way offers will be short hops between the West Coast or Northeast cities regularly served by JetSuite, but company president Keith Rabin notes that because JetSuite is a charter company, “the flights could be anywhere. Missoula, Las Vegas, San Francisco; wherever someone may have booked one of our four-passenger jets.”

“It’s an interesting concept,” said Joe Brancatelli of the business travel website, Joe Sent Me. “There are some other private-jet rental firms doing this kind of ‘remainder’ stuff in various channels,” but they all face the same problem. “You’re left to the commercial system for your return flight. In most cases, prices for walk-up, one-way fares — unless, of course, you can score a Southwest or JetBlue flight — are insanely high.”

(This story first appeared on msnbc.com’s Travel Kit: Private jet travel – at affordable prices.)