flyExclusive posted $96.3 million in consolidated revenue for the first quarter of 2026, a 9% year-over-year increase, while recording its first-ever positive adjusted EBITDA in what is historically the operator's weakest seasonal quarter. Adjusted EBITDA reached $0.2 million, representing a $6.6 million swing from the $(6.4) million posted in Q1 2025. Gross profit climbed 69% to $19.1 million, with gross margin expanding nearly 700 basis points to 20%. The company's core fleet utilisation rose 15% to an average of 75 flight hours per aircraft per month, and total flight hours reached 18,537, the third-highest quarterly volume in company history — even as the overall fleet contracted 7% to 80 aircraft. The headline financial inflection is directly traceable to a single operational decision: the aggressive retirement of legacy, non-performing aircraft.
CEO Jim Segrave identified the near-elimination of legacy fleet drag — reduced by more than 90% — as the single most consequential operational improvement in the company's history. Three additional legacy aircraft are expected to exit in Q2, trimming remaining drag to under $100,000 per month. Replacement types — the Challenger 350, Citation CJ3, and Citation XLS — carry substantially higher contribution margins, with the Challenger 350 at 39% and the CJ3 and XLS variants at 27%. For pilots and flight operations professionals, this fleet rationalization has direct implications: it signals a shift toward a more standardized, maintainable, and commercially productive type roster. Operators running mixed or aging fleets frequently absorb disproportionate cost in maintenance, crew training, and scheduling complexity; flyExclusive's results provide a quantified case study in the financial return of deliberate fleet simplification.
The revenue composition shift is strategically significant. Approximately half of Q1 revenue derived from contractually committed demand — fractional shares, JetClub memberships, and partner programs — compared to just 9% in 2020, with a stated long-term target of 70%. Retail fractional share sales rose 47% year-over-year, a figure Segrave attributed in part to the reinstatement of 100% bonus depreciation, which has accelerated customer interest in fractional ownership as a tax-advantaged asset class. JetClub revenue reached $25.8 million, with 1,039 active revenue-contributing members. This revenue mix shift matters operationally because committed demand enables more reliable scheduling, better crew utilization planning, and reduced exposure to spot-market volatility — all of which directly affect the day-to-day operational environment for line pilots and dispatch teams.
The wholesale segment grew 24% year-over-year to $50.9 million, and external MRO revenue rose 14% to approximately $2 million, supported in part by Starlink installation work following flyExclusive's appointment as an authorized dealership in Q1. The expansion into avionics, paint, interior, and connectivity work reflects a broader industry trend among larger fractional and charter operators to capture maintenance margin internally rather than outsourcing it. For pilots operating in the Part 135 and fractional space, in-house MRO capability can translate to faster aircraft return-to-service times and tighter maintenance quality control — factors with direct bearing on schedule reliability and airworthiness continuity. flyExclusive's infrastructure position, including licensed maintenance and completion capabilities, also creates a potential competitive advantage as connectivity upgrades like Starlink become increasingly expected in the business aviation cabin.
Looking ahead, Segrave projected approximately 15% quarter-over-quarter top-line growth for Q2 2026, with plans to add roughly 20 aircraft during the calendar year. The operator's explicit characterization of itself as transitioning from a "transformation phase" to an "execution phase" reflects a maturation common among fractional and charter operators that survived the post-pandemic fleet and demand dislocation. Macro headwinds including fuel costs and geopolitical uncertainty were acknowledged but characterized as having minimal demand impact, consistent with the operator's positioning toward high-net-worth, economically resilient clientele. For the broader business aviation sector, flyExclusive's Q1 results illustrate that fleet discipline, contract revenue diversification, and incremental utilisation gains — rather than pure fleet expansion — represent the near-term path to sustainable operating margin in the fractional and on-demand charter segment.