Private jet empty legs in summer 2026: how to find and book them
Empty legs are the single best value in private aviation, and summer is when supply peaks. An empty leg is a repositioning flight: an aircraft has dropped off one client and must fly somewhere else, either to collect the next charter or to return to base. That ferry flight is going to happen with or without you on board, so operators discount it heavily, typically 40 to 65 percent below a full charter rate. Sable Jets runs a live empty-leg book that updates as operators confirm repositioning, and this guide explains how to actually convert one into a booked trip in summer 2026.
Why summer 2026 is an unusually strong empty-leg season
Three forces are stacking this year. First, the transatlantic charter calendar is dense: Cannes, Monaco Grand Prix, Wimbledon, and the Mediterranean island season all push aircraft into Europe between May and September, which means a lot of one-way demand and therefore a lot of repositioning. Second, the US summer pattern pulls heavy and super-midsize metal toward the Hamptons, Aspen in shoulder season, and the West Coast, leaving frequent eastbound and westbound ferries. Third, operators are managing fuel and crew-duty costs more tightly than in the post-pandemic boom, so they are more willing to publish a discounted leg than fly it empty.
The practical upshot: between roughly mid-June and early September the empty-leg pool is larger and refreshes faster than at any other point in the year. If you have date flexibility, this is the window to exploit it. Browse the current pool on our empty legs page, which lists active one-way offers worldwide with live discounts.
How an empty leg is priced
A full charter quote stacks aircraft time, positioning, fuel surcharge, handling, and federal excise tax. We break that math down in detail in how private jet pricing really works. An empty leg strips out most of the positioning component because the aircraft is already moving, which is where the headline discount comes from. You still pay aircraft time and the standard surcharges, but on a flight the operator had already committed to flying.
What the discount does not cover
The discount is real, but read the fine print. Empty legs are tied to the primary charter that created them, so the timing window is fixed and can shift by an hour or two. Catering is usually basic or absent unless you add it. And the route is the operator's route: you take the city pair on offer, not a custom one. If you need to bend any of those, you are back to a standard charter, and a light jet or midsize on a normal quote may be the better answer.
A six-step booking method that works
1. Define your flexible window, not a fixed date
Empty legs reward flexibility. Decide the earliest and latest you can travel and the city pairs you would accept. The wider your window, the more legs match.
2. Set an alert rather than refreshing a page
The pool turns over fast in summer. Standing alerts beat manual checking. Tell the flight desk your origin, destination, and date band, and we surface matching legs as operators confirm them.
3. Move within the hour
A genuinely good empty leg, a heavy jet on a popular corridor at 55 percent off, does not sit. Decide your maximum price in advance so that when the desk sends a match you can say yes immediately rather than convening a decision.
4. Confirm the aircraft, not just the route
A leg is only as good as the airframe. Check the cabin class against your passenger count and baggage. For a four-hour Mediterranean hop a super-midsize is comfortable; for a transatlantic empty leg you want a heavy or ultra-long-range jet. Our super midsize or heavy decision rule walks through the trade.
5. Build buffer on both ends
Because the leg depends on the primary charter, build one to two hours of slack before and after. Do not book an empty leg that lands 40 minutes before a non-refundable connection.
6. Lock catering and ground up front
The discount is on the flight, not the experience. Add catering, ground transport, and any special handling at the time of booking so nothing is improvised at the FBO.
When an empty leg is the wrong tool
If you fly the same corridor repeatedly, the savings from chasing legs are smaller than the certainty of a rate-locked program. Frequent flyers usually do better on a membership or Signature Card, which fixes the hourly rate and guarantees availability on short notice. Empty legs are a flexibility play; memberships are a certainty play. Most of our clients use both: the card for the trips that must happen, empty legs for the opportunistic ones.
Summer 2026 corridors to watch
On past summer patterns, the legs that appear most often are the transatlantic returns (New York and the US Northeast back from London, Nice, and Geneva), the intra-Mediterranean shuttles (Nice, Olbia, Ibiza, Mykonos), and the US coast-to-coast repositioning that follows the East Coast season. If your travel touches any of those, your odds of catching a discounted leg are high. Tell the desk the corridor and we will watch it for you.
The bottom line
Empty legs in summer 2026 are abundant, but they reward preparation, not browsing. Define a flexible window, set an alert, pre-decide your price, and confirm the airframe before the route. Do that and a 50 percent saving on a heavy jet is a realistic, repeatable outcome through the season. Start with our live empty legs board, then brief the flight desk so we can watch your corridor.