Pilatus PC-12 NGX private jetBeechcraft King Air 200 private jet

PC-12 NGX vs King Air 200

A head-to-head look at two of the most-chartered aircraft in the turboprop class.

Pilatus PC-12 NGX

PILATUS

Pilatus PC-12 NGX

The Pilatus PC-12 NGX is the latest evolution of the world's best-selling single-engine turboprop — Pratt & Whitney PT6E engine with autothrottle, larger windows and a digital BMW Designworks cabin.

FULL PILATUS PC-12 NGX PAGE →
Beechcraft King Air 200

BEECHCRAFT

Beechcraft King Air 200

The Beechcraft King Air 200 is the original executive turboprop — over 50 years in service and still one of the most-chartered regional aircraft. Seven seats, short-runway access and outstanding charter value.

FULL BEECHCRAFT KING AIR 200 PAGE →

SPECIFICATIONS

Side-by-side specifications

METRICPC-12 NGXKing Air 200
Passengers6–97
Range1,803 nm1,580 nm
Cruise speed290 kts292 kts
Cabin height4'10"4'9"
Cabin width5'0"4'6"
Baggage40 cu ft55 cu ft
Runway2,485 ft3,200 ft

Pilatus PC-12 NGX — strengths

  • PT6E engine with autothrottle
  • Short and unpaved runway capable
  • Lowest seat-mile cost in single-engine turboprop class

Beechcraft King Air 200 — strengths

  • Most-produced business turboprop in history
  • Exceptional charter value
  • Short-runway capability

CHARTER PRICING

Indicative pricing

PILATUS PC-12 NGX
Aspen → Telluridefrom $5,200
London → Le Touquetfrom £4,800
BEECHCRAFT KING AIR 200
London → Jerseyfrom £2,300
Phoenix → Sedonafrom $2,900

All-inclusive indicative one-way pricing. Confirmed quote in 10 minutes.

EXPERT VERDICT

The PC-12 NGX is the stronger all-rounder, but the King Air 200 still wins on the metrics that matter to specific buyers.

The PC-12 NGX pulls ahead on range / non-stop reach, cabin comfort, group capacity and airport access. Both sit in the turboprop class, so charter pricing is broadly aligned — let the use case (range, group size, airport pair) drive the final call.

Range / non-stop reach

PC-12 NGX

1,803 nm of range — the better choice for transcontinental and intercontinental missions.

Cabin comfort

PC-12 NGX

Taller and/or wider cabin (4'10" × 5'0") — better for long flights and stand-up movement.

Group capacity

PC-12 NGX

Seats up to 9 — the right pick when the manifest grows.

Airport access

PC-12 NGX

Shorter 2,485 ft balanced-field requirement — opens up restricted alpine, island and city-adjacent airfields.

Speed & block time

Even

Comparable on this dimension.

Verdict based on published manufacturer specifications, charter market data and Limitless Sky brokerage experience.

REQUEST A CHARTER QUOTE

Charter the PC-12 NGX or the King Air 200.

Tell us your route — our desk returns a confirmed quote on both aircraft within 10 minutes, so you can compare like-for-like on your exact mission.

CHOOSE WITH CONFIDENCE

Top reasons to choose — and who each aircraft is best for

A tailored summary for the PC-12 NGX and King Air 200: the deciding reasons in this matchup, plus the buyer archetypes each aircraft serves best.

PILATUS

Top reasons to choose the PC-12 NGX

  • Reaches 1,803 nm non-stop — 14% more range than the King Air 200, opening city pairs that would otherwise need a tech stop.
  • Bigger cabin envelope (4'10" tall × 5'0" wide) than the King Air 200 — meaningful difference on flights over three hours.
  • Seats up to 9 passengers vs 7 on the King Air 200 — better for full-group charters and family travel.
  • Lands in 2,485 ft balanced field — accesses short, restricted and city-adjacent airports the King Air 200 cannot.
  • PT6E engine with autothrottle

BEST FOR

  • Longer non-stop reach

    When the mission is on the edge of the King Air 200's envelope, the 1,803 nm legs of the PC-12 NGX keep reserves intact.

  • Larger party charters

    Up to 9 seats vs 7 on the King Air 200 — the natural pick when the manifest grows last-minute.

  • Short-field departures

    2,485 ft balanced field unlocks airports the King Air 200 cannot use, putting passengers closer to the door.

  • Island & alpine access

    Short, unpaved or high-altitude strips that jets simply cannot use.

BEECHCRAFT

Top reasons to choose the King Air 200

  • 55 cu ft of baggage volume — fits ski, golf and extended-stay luggage that crowds the PC-12 NGX.
  • Most-produced business turboprop in history
  • Exceptional charter value
  • Short-runway capability

BEST FOR

  • Island & alpine access

    Short, unpaved or high-altitude strips that jets simply cannot use.

  • Sub-500 nm hops

    Operating cost per seat-mile beats every jet on quick regional legs.

  • Cargo-heavy missions

    Large cabin door and floor loading for ski, dive and field-kit travel.

  • Medevac & utility

    Stretcher and rapid-reconfig layouts for time-critical lifts.

PROS & CONS

Honest assessment

PILATUS

Pilatus PC-12 NGX

PROS

  • +PT6E engine with autothrottle
  • +Short and unpaved runway capable
  • +Lowest seat-mile cost in single-engine turboprop class
  • +Longer legs than the King Air 200 (1,803 nm vs 1,580 nm) — fewer fuel stops on intercontinental missions.
  • +Carries up to 9 passengers vs 7 on the King Air 200 — better for larger groups.
  • +Wider cabin (5'0") makes a meaningful difference at the shoulders vs the King Air 200.

CONS

  • Tighter baggage capacity than the King Air 200 (40 cu ft vs 55 cu ft).

BEECHCRAFT

Beechcraft King Air 200

PROS

  • +Most-produced business turboprop in history
  • +Exceptional charter value
  • +Short-runway capability
  • +Larger baggage hold (55 cu ft) — useful for ski, golf or extended luggage vs the PC-12 NGX.

CONS

  • Shorter range than the PC-12 NGX (1,580 nm vs 1,803 nm) — may require a tech stop on long sectors.
  • Maximum 7-seat layout is tight if you regularly travel with more than 7 — the PC-12 NGX adds 2 seats.
  • Needs more runway than the PC-12 NGX (3,200 ft vs 2,485 ft) — fewer short-field options.

REAL-WORLD MISSIONS

Which aircraft for which mission

Four scenarios our charter desk sees regularly — and which of these two we would actually quote.

SCENARIO 01

Ski-week shuttle into a short alpine strip

OUR PICKPC-12 NGX

Shorter runway requirement (2,485 ft) opens up the airfield.

SEE FULL AIRCRAFT →

SCENARIO 02

Coastal island hop with bicycles and dive gear

OUR PICKPC-12 NGX

Shorter runway requirement (2,485 ft) opens up the airfield.

SEE FULL AIRCRAFT →

SCENARIO 03

Regional medevac repositioning with stretcher kit

OUR PICKPC-12 NGX

Shorter runway requirement (2,485 ft) opens up the airfield.

SEE FULL AIRCRAFT →

SCENARIO 04

Field-visit tour across three regional airports in one day

OUR PICKPC-12 NGX

Shorter runway requirement (2,485 ft) opens up the airfield.

SEE FULL AIRCRAFT →

ROUTE RECOMMENDATIONS

Best pick per route

ROUTEDISTANCERECOMMENDEDWHY
London → Le Touquet120 nmPC-12 NGXBoth reach it, but the longer-legged option keeps more fuel reserves for weather and routing changes.
Zurich → St Moritz95 nmPC-12 NGXBoth reach it, but the longer-legged option keeps more fuel reserves for weather and routing changes.
Aspen → Telluride115 nmPC-12 NGXBoth reach it, but the longer-legged option keeps more fuel reserves for weather and routing changes.
Nantucket → Teterboro180 nmPC-12 NGXBoth reach it, but the longer-legged option keeps more fuel reserves for weather and routing changes.

Distances are great-circle approximations; actual fuel planning accounts for winds, weather and reserves.

FAQ

PC-12 NGX vs King Air 200 — frequently asked

PC-12 NGX vs King Air 200: which has the longer range?OPEN

The Pilatus PC-12 NGX has a published range of 1,803 nm; the Beechcraft King Air 200 is rated at 1,580 nm. The longer-range aircraft opens up more non-stop city pairs without a tech stop.

Which is faster — PC-12 NGX or King Air 200?OPEN

Cruise speeds are 290 kts for the Pilatus PC-12 NGX and 292 kts for the Beechcraft King Air 200. On a Aspen → Telluride-style mission the faster aircraft typically saves 10–25 minutes block time.

How many passengers does each aircraft carry?OPEN

The Pilatus PC-12 NGX seats 6–9; the Beechcraft King Air 200 seats 7. Charter prices below assume a typical executive layout — high-density configurations are available on request.

What does it cost to charter the Pilatus PC-12 NGX vs the Beechcraft King Air 200?OPEN

Indicative one-way pricing on a benchmark mission: Pilatus PC-12 NGX from from $5,200, Beechcraft King Air 200 from from £2,300. Confirmed quote in 10 minutes — pricing varies with empty-leg availability, season and routing.

Which aircraft is better for transatlantic or long-range missions?OPEN

Both belong to the Turboprop category, but range, payload and runway performance differ. See the route-recommendations table on this page for our specific pick per corridor.

MORE COMPARISONS

Compare more turboprops

PC-12 NGX × KING AIR 200 CLUSTER

Continue researching PC-12 NGX or King Air 200

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