Heavy Jet charter from Munich to Geneva. Live pricing, certified operators, 24/7 dispatch.
Munich Airport's General Aviation Terminal sits on the north side, a short taxi from runway 08R/26L and well clear of the scheduled traffic that congests the main aprons through the morning bank. For a heavy jet positioning out of EDDM, the practical constraints are rarely the airframe and almost always the timing. Munich operates a night restriction between 2200 and 0600 local, with departures inside the shoulder hours subject to noise-quota scrutiny, so a late slot pushed by a delayed inbound principal can turn a routine evening lift into a next-morning departure. The route itself is short, often under an hour in the air, which means the ground sequence at both ends carries more weight than the cruise.
Geneva is the asymmetry. LSGG runs its own night curfew and a firm slot regime, and the FBOs on the south side, principally the long-established handlers serving the business aviation terminal, fill quickly during the winter season and around the watch and finance calendars. A heavy jet here is frequently overspecified for the leg, but it earns its place when the onward plan calls for a transatlantic or Gulf sector the same day, or when cabin standing and baggage volume matter more than block time. Customs and immigration clear through the dedicated GA channel rather than the main terminal, and Switzerland's position outside the EU customs union means goods and certain documentation are handled differently from a purely intra-Schengen hop, even though passport formalities stay light.
What this pairing rewards is planning that treats both curfews as fixed and the slot as the scarce resource. Filing early, holding a realistic positioning buffer for the aircraft and crew, and confirming handling before the principal commits to a departure time will do more for the day than any amount of speed. The heavy jet gives range and cabin in reserve; the discipline that makes it useful on a leg this short is operational, settled on the ground at Munich and Geneva long before the doors close.
A Heavy Jet balances cabin, range, and hourly rate for the typical Munich-Geneva 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.
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