Renting vs. Owning an Aircraft: The Math for Student and Career Pilots
March 25, 2026
Owning a plane sounds appealing until you run the numbers. Here is an honest cost comparison between aircraft ownership and renting the SR20 G6 at Kodiak Aviation for pilots in the hour-building phase.
The dream of aircraft ownership is one of the more persistent forces in aviation. You get to fly your own plane. You can take it anywhere. No scheduling conflicts, no strangers in the left seat before you, no wondering who abused it last Tuesday.
All of that is real. What is also real is the cost structure of ownership, which looks very different than it does in the imagination, especially for pilots who are still building hours toward a commercial certificate or ATP.
This post runs the actual numbers. The comparison is between owning a Cirrus SR20, which is the aircraft you would be renting from Kodiak Aviation at Falcon Field anyway, and renting the same aircraft at $285 per hour wet for your hour-building phase.
The True Cost of Owning a Cirrus SR20

A used Cirrus SR20 in airworthy condition with a current annual and reasonable avionics is going to cost you somewhere between $150,000 and $220,000 depending on year, total time, and equipment. A newer G6 in good condition is $200,000 or more.
Purchase price is just the beginning. Here is what the annual ownership cost looks like for a typical SR20 owner flying 100 hours per year:
| Cost Category | Annual Estimate | Cost per Hour (100 hrs/yr) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual inspection (engine, airframe) | $2,500-$4,000 | $25-$40/hr |
| Hangar or tiedown | $3,600-$9,600/yr | $36-$96/hr |
| Insurance (private use, PPL) | $3,000-$7,000/yr | $30-$70/hr |
| Avionics maintenance & database updates | $1,200-$2,500/yr | $12-$25/hr |
| Fuel (avgas, ~$7/gal, ~9 GPH average) | $6,300/yr | $63/hr |
| Engine reserve (OH at ~2,000 hrs) | $3,500-$5,000/yr | $35-$50/hr |
| CAPS repack (required periodically) | $700-$1,200 amortized | $7-$12/hr |
| Miscellaneous repairs and airworthiness | $1,500-$3,000/yr | $15-$30/hr |
| Total operating cost (estimate) | $22,300-$41,400/yr | $223-$414/hr |
What Renting Actually Costs
Rental at Kodiak Aviation in the SR20 G6 (N701YZ) is $285 per hour wet. Fuel is included. You pay for what you fly and nothing more.
For a pilot flying 100 hours per year in the rental aircraft, the total cost is $28,500. That figure includes no fixed costs, no maintenance exposure, no hangar, no insurance premiums, no engine reserve, and no capital commitment.
At 100 hours per year, the rental cost of $28,500 falls squarely within the ownership cost range of $22,300 to $41,400. But the ownership number assumes nothing goes wrong. A single unscheduled engine event, an avionics issue, or an off-airport incident can add $10,000 to $30,000 to your cost in a single year.
The Breakeven Analysis
To justify ownership over rental on pure cost grounds, you need to fly enough hours per year that your per-hour ownership cost drops below the rental rate. At a $200,000 purchase price and $22,300 in fixed annual costs:
- At 100 hrs/yr: Ownership costs approximately $285/hr in operating costs alone, before capital
- At 200 hrs/yr: Operating cost drops to approximately $185/hr, plus capital cost
- At 300 hrs/yr: Operating cost around $140/hr — rental starts to look expensive by comparison
Most private pilots flying for hour-building purposes do not fly 200 or 300 hours per year. If you are flying 80 to 150 hours annually, the economic case for ownership during the hour-building phase is weak.
“Ownership starts to make sense when you are flying a lot and you need the aircraft to be available on your exact schedule. During the hour-building phase, most pilots do not have that problem. They have a planning window, they can book in advance, and they are better off keeping that capital liquid. The aircraft will still be here when they need it.” — Kodiak Aviation, Falcon Field
Other Factors That Favor Renting During Hour-Building

Insurance and Liability
Renting through an FBO means the aircraft is insured under the FBO’s policy. You carry renter’s insurance, which is substantially cheaper than owner’s insurance, particularly for pilots with lower total time. Owner’s insurance for a pilot with fewer than 500 hours in a Cirrus SR20 will be expensive and may include significant deductibles or restrictions on instrument flight.
No Maintenance Responsibility
When you rent from Kodiak Aviation, you fly the airplane and give it back. Maintenance, airworthiness directives, avionics updates, and unscheduled repair events are not your problem. Every Airworthiness Directive issued for the SR20 is the operator’s legal responsibility, not yours. That is a real and meaningful risk you do not carry as a renter.
Aircraft Currency and Capability
The SR20 G6 at Kodiak has current avionics, a current engine, and a current CAPS repack. A used aircraft you purchase may have deferred maintenance, aging avionics, or an engine approaching its time before overhaul. Ownership requires you to bring the aircraft up to your standards and keep it there.
Capital Preservation
The money you do not spend on an aircraft purchase stays liquid. For pilots in their 20s or 30s building hours toward an ATP, that capital invested elsewhere over five years grows. The opportunity cost of a $200,000 aircraft purchase is not zero.
When Ownership Actually Makes Sense
This post is not an argument against aircraft ownership. It is an argument for timing it correctly.
Ownership makes genuine financial sense when you are flying frequently, you need the aircraft on your schedule without advance booking, you have a specific mission profile that rental aircraft do not satisfy, or you intend to keep the aircraft long enough to benefit from appreciation rather than depreciation.
For pilots in the hour-building phase who are working toward a commercial certificate or ATP minimums, the math almost always favors renting. After you have your commercial, if you are flight instructing or flying charter and putting 300 hours on a single aircraft every year, the calculation changes.
Run the Numbers for Your Situation
Rental in the SR20 G6 at Kodiak Aviation is $285/hr wet, with 15 and 30-hour packages available. If you are evaluating whether to purchase or rent for your hour-building phase, contact Kodiak. The team has worked with pilots at every stage of this decision and can help you think through the numbers honestly.
Talk to Kodiak About Hour-Building Options | kodiakaviation.com | Falcon Field Airport (KFFZ), Mesa AZ
