The story behind the Premier IA
The Beechcraft Premier 1 was one of the most ambitious clean-sheet business jets of the 1990s. Announced in 1995 and certified in 2001, it was the first — and to date the only — production business jet with a fully composite fuselage, built using automated fibre-placement techniques adapted from Raytheon's Hawker programme. That composite fuselage did what composite structures always promise: it allowed a wider cabin than the aluminium equivalent at the same weight and drag budget. The result was a light jet with a genuine 5-foot-6-inch cabin width, wider than several midsize jets, wrapped around a modern Williams FJ44-2A engine installation.
The current Premier IA is a 2006 refresh: modest interior updates, a Rockwell Collins Pro Line 21 avionics upgrade and a range of small aerodynamic refinements. Production ended in 2013 after 313 airframes were built, when Beechcraft's post-bankruptcy focus narrowed to the King Air line. Around 220 Premier IAs remain in active service, mostly in the US Part 135 fleet with a handful of European examples.
For charter clients, the Premier IA is the aircraft you book when you want light-jet economics and single-pilot operation, but the passenger group needs a wider cabin than the CJ or Phenom families offer. It is a genuinely differentiated aircraft in the current market — no other light jet delivers this combination of cabin width and cost profile.

