Texas Routes
Private Jet Charter
Dallas to Austin
Love Field · Addison · Executive → Austin-Bergstrom · Austin Executive · No fuel stop · Domestic
The flight is 40–55 minutes. The drive is 3.5 to 4.5 hours on I-35. For executives making same-day business trips, teams traveling to tech meetings, or anyone flying to SXSW, Austin City Limits, or F1 at Circuit of the Americas — private aviation on this corridor is about time recovery, not status.
Route Overview
Dallas to Austin
by Private Jet
Dallas to Austin is approximately 165 miles (265 km) direct. Flight time runs 40–55 minutes depending on aircraft type. No fuel stop is required, and as a domestic route there is no customs or passport requirement — only a government-issued photo ID for all passengers.
This is one of Texas's most frequently flown private jet corridors. The sector is short enough that a turboprop or very light jet handles it efficiently. Larger aircraft are available when group size demands it, but they're not required by the distance.
| Route Combination | Distance | Est. Flight Time |
|---|---|---|
| Dallas Love Field (DAL) → Austin-Bergstrom (AUS) | ~165 mi | ~45–50 min |
| Dallas Executive (RBD) → Austin Executive (EDC) | ~165 mi | ~40–48 min |
| Addison Airport (ADS) → Austin-Bergstrom (AUS) | ~170 mi | ~45–52 min |
| DFW → Austin-Bergstrom (AUS) | ~175 mi | ~48–55 min |
The I-35 Argument
Why This Route Matters
Most charter pages on this route mention that flying private is faster than driving. None of them explain exactly why it matters so much on this particular corridor.
I-35 between Dallas and Austin is not a pleasant drive on a good day. Through Waco, Temple, and into the Austin metro, the highway is a known bottleneck. On a Friday afternoon, that 165 miles can take closer to 4.5–5 hours. During SXSW week or on Formula 1 race weekends, it gets worse.
A private jet from Dallas to Austin puts you wheels down in Austin before a commercial traveler has cleared security at DFW. Door-to-door — including the drive to the FBO, the flight, and ground transport on arrival — typically runs 2 to 2.5 hours. That's a 90-minute to two-hour advantage over commercial, and a three-hour advantage over driving on a busy day.
For a same-day business meeting, that time difference is the difference between a productive day and a lost one. An executive can depart at 7:00 AM, arrive in Austin by 9:00 AM, and be back in Dallas by 4:00 PM — without an overnight stay.
Dallas Departure Airports
Which One Works for You
Dallas has more private jet airport options than most cities its size. The right choice depends on where you're based in the metro and what you're doing in Austin.
Dallas Love Field
Located ~6 miles northwest of downtown Dallas, Love Field operates 24 hours and has multiple FBOs including Signature Flight Support, Atlantic Aviation, Business Jet Center, and Jet Aviation. Professional lounges, conference rooms, catering, and ground transportation available. The standard departure choice for central Dallas, Highland Park, and Uptown travelers.
Dallas Executive Airport
Sits ~10 miles south of downtown, handling almost exclusively private and general aviation traffic. If you're based in Oak Cliff, Duncanville, Cedar Hill, or anywhere south or southwest of the city, RBD is considerably more convenient than driving north. Quieter, faster-processing operation — direct ramp access with minimal wait times.
Addison Airport
Located in North Dallas, ~14 miles from downtown along the North Dallas Tollway. The practical departure point for Plano, Frisco, Allen, McKinney, Richardson, and the Legacy corridor. Features a 7,202-foot concrete runway accommodating most jet categories. Most competitor pages miss this airport entirely — a significant oversight for the North Dallas tech market.
Dallas/Fort Worth International
The second-busiest airport in the United States by operations. Ground congestion, commercial traffic, and complex routing make it inefficient as a private departure hub for a short domestic sector. The primary use case here is international connections — if arriving from abroad and continuing to Austin in the same operational flow, DFW makes sense.
| Airport | ICAO | Distance to Downtown | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Love Field | KDAL | ~6 miles NW | Central, North, Uptown Dallas |
| Dallas Executive | KRBD | ~10 miles S | South Dallas, Oak Cliff suburbs |
| Addison | KADS | ~14 miles N | Plano, Frisco, North Dallas tech corridor |
| DFW | KDFW | ~20 miles NW | International connections only |
Austin Arrival Airports
AUS vs. EDC
Austin has two viable private jet airports. They serve different purposes, and choosing correctly matters more than most travelers realize.
Austin-Bergstrom International (AUS / KAUS)
Best for: Downtown access, business meetings, most travelers
AUS is the primary airport serving Austin, sitting approximately 5 miles southeast of downtown. Three FBOs operate on the south side: Atlantic Aviation, Signature Flight Support, and Million Air — all offering full private terminal services with direct ramp access.
The main advantage is proximity to the city center, the Domain, and the University of Texas area. It's also the required arrival point for international connections. The downside: AUS gets congested during major events. SXSW, Austin City Limits, and Formula 1 race weekends all push the airport to capacity. Commercial traffic, event charters, and regular private aviation compete for ramp space. If your trip coincides with a major event, AUS requires more advance coordination than usual.
During F1, SXSW, or ACL, AUS FBO ramp space fills quickly. Book well in advance and confirm slot availability — don't assume standard availability applies during event weekends.
Austin Executive Airport (EDC / KEDC)
Best for: COTA events, northeast tech corridor, uncongested ops
Austin Executive is a purpose-built general aviation airport located ~17 miles northeast of downtown, near Pflugerville. No commercial flights — only private and general aviation. Henriksen Jet Center is the sole FBO, consistently rated among the top FBOs in Texas.
EDC has a 6,025-foot runway, handling light jets, turboprops, and most super-light jets. The strongest case for EDC is Circuit of the Americas — the racetrack is directly accessible via the SH-130 toll road in under 15 minutes on race weekend. During F1, MotoGP, or other COTA events, EDC handles a meaningful portion of event charter traffic that would otherwise overwhelm AUS.
EDC is also excellent for travelers heading to northeast Austin/Pflugerville/Round Rock, where Dell and Samsung have major campuses. Midsize jets can use EDC but should confirm runway suitability. Heavy jets are not recommended at EDC.
| Airport | ICAO | Distance to Downtown | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austin-Bergstrom | KAUS | ~5 miles SE | Downtown, business meetings, most travelers |
| Austin Executive | KEDC | ~17 miles NE | COTA events, northeast tech corridor, uncongested ops |
Not sure which airport works best for your trip?
Tell us where you're going in Austin — we'll recommend the right arrival point for your itinerary and dates.
Aircraft Selection
Right-Sizing the Aircraft for This Route
The flight is 40–55 minutes. That single fact changes the aircraft recommendation significantly compared to a longer sector. Range capability is irrelevant here — cabin comfort, passenger count, and cost efficiency are what matter.
King Air 350, Pilatus PC-12
The underrated choice on this route. At under an hour of flight time, the speed advantage of a light jet is marginal — roughly 10–15 minutes. The cost difference is more meaningful. A King Air 350 offers a proper club cabin and full luggage capacity for up to 8 passengers. On a 165-mile sector, the practical passenger experience difference is minimal. Don't dismiss turboprops because they're not jets.
Phenom 300, Citation CJ3+, CJ4
The standard recommendation for most Dallas to Austin charter requests. Full pressurized cabin, proper baggage space, and comfortable seating for up to 6 passengers. Fast enough to complete the sector in 44 minutes, well-equipped, and priced appropriately for the distance. For most charter requests on this route, a light jet hits the optimal balance of comfort and cost.
Citation M2, HondaJet
Efficient and fast enough to complete the sector in 45 minutes. For 2–3 passengers traveling light, this is the cost-optimal jet option. Well-suited to executive solo travel or small team trips where luggage requirements are minimal. Priced appropriately for the distance without the overhead of a full light jet cabin.
Citation XLS+, Challenger 350
Makes sense when traveling with 6 or more people, or when cabin comfort is the primary driver. For a 45-minute flight, a midsize jet is a meaningful cost step-up over a light jet. If group size justifies it — absolutely. But don't pay midsize prices for a group of 3 on a 50-minute flight. On this route, right-sizing the aircraft to passenger count is always the better call.
| Category | Typical Aircraft | Passengers | Est. Flight Time | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turboprop | King Air 350, PC-12 | 4–8 | ~55 min | Budget-efficient, larger groups |
| Very Light Jet | Citation M2, HondaJet | 2–4 | ~48 min | Small groups, cost-efficient |
| Light Jet | Phenom 300, CJ3+ | 4–6 | ~44 min | Most travelers — standard recommendation |
| Super-Light Jet | Citation XLS+ | 6–8 | ~42 min | Groups needing more cabin space |
| Midsize Jet | Challenger 350 | 7–9 | ~40 min | Larger groups, premium cabin preference |
Not sure which aircraft fits your group?
Browse the full fleet or request a quote — we'll recommend the right aircraft for your passenger count and dates.
Charter Pricing
Dallas to Austin in 2026
This is a competitive, high-frequency route in Texas. Pricing reflects that. Base rates are relatively low given the short sector — but event periods change the picture significantly.
| Aircraft Category | Est. One-Way | Est. Same-Day Round Trip | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Turboprop | $4,500 – $6,500 | $7,000 – $10,000 | Most cost-efficient option |
| Very Light Jet | $5,500 – $8,000 | $9,000 – $13,000 | Good for 2–3 passengers |
| Light Jet | $7,500 – $12,000 | $12,000 – $18,000 | Standard recommendation |
| Super-Light Jet | $9,500 – $15,000 | $15,000 – $22,000 | Larger groups |
| Midsize Jet | $12,000 – $20,000 | $19,000 – $30,000 | Groups of 6–9 |
All pricing is indicative for 2026. Final quotes depend on aircraft availability, positioning requirements, and travel dates. Event periods — SXSW, ACL, F1 — carry premium surcharges of 25–50% above standard rates.
During SXSW (March), Austin City Limits (October), and Formula 1 at COTA (typically October/November), charter pricing on this route can increase 25–50% above standard rates. Aircraft availability tightens significantly. For event-driven travel to Austin, the booking window matters. SXSW and F1 charters from Dallas should ideally be coordinated 4–6 weeks in advance.
Get a Quote for Your Dallas–Austin Charter
Send us your dates and group size. We'll respond with transparent aircraft options and accurate pricing for your specific trip.
Same-Day Round Trip
How It Works
Dallas to Austin lends itself naturally to same-day return travel. An executive can take a 7:00 AM departure, be in Austin meetings by 9:00 AM, wrap up by early afternoon, and be back in Dallas by 3:00 or 4:00 PM. That's a full, productive business day without an overnight.
Two options exist for the return leg, each with different cost and scheduling implications:
Option A: Aircraft Waits in Austin
The charter aircraft stays on the ground in Austin while you're at meetings. This adds crew and parking costs for the wait time but guarantees the aircraft is ready when you are — no scheduling risk. For same-day returns of up to 6–8 hours in Austin, this is often the cleaner option. You set your own departure window and the aircraft is there when you're done.
Option B: Aircraft Repositions to Dallas
The aircraft returns to Dallas and comes back later. This can reduce wait costs during your time in Austin but introduces scheduling risk — if your meetings run long or you need flexibility, a repositioning arrangement is less reliable. Best suited to trips where the return time is fixed and unlikely to change. For longer days or overnight trips, a one-way outbound with a separate return charter may be worth evaluating.
For same-day trips shorter than 6–8 hours in Austin, aircraft wait is generally the recommended approach. Confirm aircraft wait arrangements when requesting your quote, as this affects total trip cost and should be factored into your budget from the outset.
Demand Spikes
When to Book Early
Austin is one of the most event-dense cities in the United States relative to its size. These events directly affect private charter availability and pricing on the Dallas–Austin route.
SXSW — South by Southwest
One of the largest music, film, and technology conferences in the country. Austin's airports — particularly AUS — operate at capacity throughout the festival (~10 days). Private jet demand from Dallas spikes for the full conference window. AUS FBO ramp space fills quickly; EDC is sometimes a cleaner arrival option if SXSW events are in South Austin.
Book 4–6 weeks outAustin City Limits Music Festival
ACL runs across two weekends in October at Zilker Park. A smaller demand spike than SXSW but still meaningful. Standard advance booking is sufficient for most years, though last-minute options at preferred price points can be limited. Plan ahead if you have a preferred aircraft category.
Book 2–3 weeks outFormula 1 United States Grand Prix
The most concentrated private aviation demand event in Austin annually. F1 at Circuit of the Americas draws an internationally wealthy audience and private jet arrivals are extremely high. Austin Executive Airport (EDC) is the most practical arrival — direct SH-130 access puts you at COTA in under 15 minutes. AUS is also used but involves more ground transit and congestion. Aircraft availability is genuinely limited in the days around race weekend.
Book 4–6 weeks out · EDC preferredMotoGP, IndyCar & Other COTA Events
COTA hosts multiple motorsport events each year. Each generates a smaller version of the F1 demand spike. If your Austin trip coincides with any COTA event, confirm aircraft availability and airport slot availability earlier than you would for a routine business trip. EDC remains the optimal arrival airport for all COTA events.
Book 2–3 weeks out · EDC preferred| Event | Typical Period | Advance Booking Recommended | Best Austin Airport |
|---|---|---|---|
| SXSW | March | 4–6 weeks | AUS (downtown) or EDC |
| Austin City Limits | October | 2–3 weeks | AUS |
| Formula 1 (COTA) | October/November | 4–6 weeks | EDC (fastest to track) |
| MotoGP (COTA) | Varies | 2–3 weeks | EDC |
Door-to-Door
Time Comparison
The calculation most competitors reference vaguely but never actually work through. Here's the real arithmetic.
Private Jet
Love Field FBO to downtown Austin
Arrive & board at FBO (15 min)
Flight (45–50 min)
Walk off aircraft, ramp access (5 min)
Ground transport to downtown (20 min)
Commercial Flight
DFW to downtown Austin
Parking/shuttle (15 min)
TSA/check-in (30–45 min)
Gate time/boarding (20 min)
Flight (50 min)
Deplane/baggage (20 min)
Ground transport to downtown (20 min)
Driving I-35
Central Dallas to Central Austin
Friday afternoon: 4.5+ hours
SXSW week: 4.5–5+ hours
F1 race weekend: 5+ hours
Through Waco, Temple, and Austin metro — one of the most congested interstate corridors in the country.
Private jet saves approximately 1 to 1.5 hours over commercial door-to-door, and 2 to 3 hours over driving on a congested day. For a same-day business trip, that time return justifies the price difference for most executive travelers.
Empty Legs
Empty Legs on the Dallas–Austin Corridor
The Texas intrastate market generates regular repositioning flights. Empty legs on Dallas–Austin appear frequently, with savings of 30–60% off standard charter rates.
The trade-off is fixed scheduling and the possibility of cancellation if the primary booking changes. Empty legs suit flexible travelers who can work around a predetermined departure time. They are not suited to travelers who need to control their schedule.
If your dates are flexible, ask about current empty leg availability when requesting a quote. This is one of the more active empty leg corridors in Texas.
Check Empty Leg Availability
Current repositioning flights on the Dallas–Austin route.
Corporate Travel
Corporate & Executive Charter
The Dallas–Austin corridor is one of the highest-frequency corporate charter routes in Texas. The tech, finance, and energy sectors between the two cities generate consistent demand for same-day and multi-leg executive travel.
Aervion Charter works with corporate travel managers and executive assistants to coordinate recurring routes, multi-passenger arrangements, and last-minute schedule changes. We advise on aircraft selection based on group size and frequency, and handle all coordination — aircraft confirmation, FBO arrangements, catering, and ground transport on both ends.
For companies running regular Dallas–Austin travel, understanding the right aircraft category and booking windows across event periods can meaningfully reduce overall charter spend without compromising service standards.
Corporate Charter Services
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
How long is the private jet flight from Dallas to Austin?
The flight is approximately 40 to 55 minutes depending on aircraft type. A turboprop runs closer to 55 minutes; a midsize jet can complete the sector in under 45. No fuel stop is required.
What does it cost to charter a private jet from Dallas to Austin?
In 2026, a light jet one-way runs approximately $7,500 to $12,000. Turboprops start closer to $4,500. Midsize jets are $12,000 to $20,000 one-way. Same-day round trips add aircraft wait time or repositioning costs. Event periods — SXSW, F1, ACL — carry premium surcharges of 25–50% above standard rates.
Which Dallas airport is best for a private jet to Austin?
It depends on where in Dallas you're based. Love Field (DAL) is the standard choice for central Dallas. Addison Airport (ADS) is the right call for North Dallas, Plano, Frisco, and McKinney. Dallas Executive (RBD) suits South Dallas and travelers who prefer a quieter, private-aviation-only facility.
Which Austin airport should I use?
Austin-Bergstrom (AUS) is closer to downtown and the better choice for most business trips and standard travel. Austin Executive (EDC) is the correct airport for Circuit of the Americas events and travelers heading to the northeast Austin tech corridor. EDC is also a cleaner, less congested option during peak periods when AUS is heavily loaded.
Is a turboprop good enough for Dallas to Austin?
Yes — and on this specific route, it's often the most sensible choice for groups of up to 6 or 7 passengers. The speed difference between a turboprop and a light jet on a 165-mile sector is roughly 10–15 minutes. If the cost difference matters, a King Air 350 or Pilatus PC-12 delivers a comfortable cabin experience without the price premium of a jet.
How far in advance should I book a charter from Dallas to Austin?
For routine travel, 48–72 hours is generally sufficient, though 1–2 weeks out improves aircraft options and pricing. For SXSW or Formula 1 weekends, book 4–6 weeks in advance. Aircraft availability around those events is genuinely constrained and last-minute options are limited.
Can I do a same-day round trip from Dallas to Austin?
Yes. This is one of the most common use cases on this route. An early morning departure allows a full day of meetings in Austin with a late afternoon return. The aircraft typically waits on the ground in Austin. Confirm aircraft wait arrangements when requesting a quote, as this affects total trip cost.
Are empty legs available on this route?
Yes. The Texas intrastate market generates regular repositioning flights. Empty legs on Dallas–Austin appear frequently, with savings of 30–60% off standard rates. The trade-off is fixed scheduling and the possibility of cancellation if the primary booking changes. Ask about current availability when requesting a quote.
Do I need any travel documents for this flight?
Dallas to Austin is a domestic flight entirely within the United States. No passport, no customs, no immigration. A government-issued photo ID is required for all passengers.
Request a Quote
Ready to Fly Dallas to Austin?
Send us your travel dates, passenger count, and preferred departure area in Dallas. We'll respond with aircraft options matched to your group size and transparent pricing for your specific dates — not generic estimates pulled from a rate card. No obligation to inquire.