Midsize Jet charter from Los Angeles to Tokyo. Live pricing, certified operators, 24/7 dispatch.
Los Angeles to Tokyo sits at the outer edge of what a midsize cabin can do, and the honest framing matters more than the brochure version. A Citation XLS or Learjet 75 will not cross the Pacific nonstop, so this route is built around a fuel stop, most often Anchorage (PANC) or, when winds and payload cooperate, a northern Canadian field. Plan for one technical stop, a crew duty window that respects the long day, and a realistic door to door closer to fifteen hours than the headline flight time.
Departure out of Van Nuys (KVNY) is the civilized part of the trip. The FBOs there, Clay Lacy and Signal among them, handle customs coordination and early slots without drama, and the absence of an airline terminal means a thirty minute arrival before wheels up is genuine rather than aspirational. The complication lives on the far end. Haneda (RJTT) operates under tight slot control and a nighttime curfew that effectively closes business aviation movements between roughly 2300 and 0600 local, so the schedule has to be reverse engineered from an arrival slot rather than a convenient Los Angeles departure. Securing that slot, and the corresponding parking, is the work that should happen before anything else is promised. Narita (RJAA) is the fallback when Haneda is full, with the tradeoff of a longer ground transfer into central Tokyo.
What this means in practice is that a midsize aircraft is a defensible choice for this city pair only when the passenger count is low, the schedule has give, and the fuel stop is treated as part of the plan rather than a surprise. For four passengers with flexible timing it can work and it can save meaningfully against a heavy jet. For a full cabin or a fixed same day meeting, the stop and the curfew will erode the advantage, and a super-midsize or heavy aircraft becomes the more sober recommendation. We will quote the midsize option plainly, show the stop and the slot assumptions, and tell you when the larger cabin is the better value rather than the easier upsell.
A Midsize Jet balances cabin, range, and hourly rate for the typical Los Angeles-Tokyo mission profile, with direct-flight capability and strong payload margin.
Typical block time is between 1 and 12 hours depending on aircraft category. A super-midsize jet is the common sweet spot for this sector on a one-way sector.
With no unusual slot constraints, the desk can confirm options inside an hour and most flights are bookable with 12-24 hours notice. Peak periods benefit from 3-5 days lead.
Both ends handle the full general-aviation customs workflow; your dispatcher files the gendec and coordinates crew and pax clearance based on your itinerary.
Yes. Published empty-leg prices are typically 40-75% below the full-charter rate, though they require date flexibility and are inventory-dependent.
The Sable Jets desk is online 24/7. Firm options in under an hour from the enquiry above or our concierge line.
Request a live quote → Call flight desk