NetJets Opens New Maintenance Hub at Reading Regional Airport in Pennsylvania

NetJets Opens New Maintenance Hub at Reading Regional Airport in Pennsylvania

BY KALUM SHASHI ISHARA Published 3 hours ago 0 COMMENTS

NetJets, the fractional ownership operator owned by Berkshire Hathaway, has begun maintenance operations at its newly established facility at Reading Regional Airport in Pennsylvania. The move marks another step in the company's effort to expand in-house maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) capacity as its fleet continues to grow at one of the fastest paces in the private aviation industry.

 

The Reading site joins a growing list of NetJets-operated maintenance bases across the United States. For enthusiasts tracking the operator's vertical integration strategy, the launch represents a deliberate push to bring more technical work under direct company control rather than relying solely on third-party providers.

 

 

What the Reading Facility Brings to the Network

 

Located at Reading Regional Airport (RDG), the new MRO operation is positioned to service NetJets aircraft operating along the busy northeastern corridor of the United States. The region accounts for a significant share of business jet traffic in North America, and placing maintenance capacity closer to where aircraft routinely fly reduces ferry time and aircraft downtime.

 

According to information published by ch-aviation, NetJets has formally launched operations at the facility, adding it to a maintenance network that already includes locations in Columbus, Ohio, where the company is headquartered, as well as additional sites supporting its expanding fleet.

 

The Reading airport itself has a long aviation history and offers the runway length and infrastructure required to handle the mid-size and large-cabin business jets that dominate the NetJets fleet. That includes aircraft such as the Cessna Citation Latitude and Longitude, the Embraer Praetor 500, the Bombardier Challenger 350 and 3500, and the Bombardier Global 6500.

 

Photo: AeroXplorer/ Mitchell Roetting

 

Why NetJets Is Building Its Own MRO Footprint

 

The fractional operator has faced sustained demand growth since the pandemic reshaped private travel patterns. Wait lists for new shares, increased flight hours per owner, and a rapidly expanding fleet have all placed pressure on maintenance throughput. Third-party MRO providers across North America have reported backlogs, with some operators waiting weeks or months for available slots on common business jet types.

 

By operating its own facilities, NetJets gains tighter control over scheduling, parts inventory, and technician availability. The company has invested heavily in technician recruitment and training programs in recent years, partnering with technical schools and offering apprenticeship pathways to address the wider industry shortage of certified airframe and powerplant mechanics.

 

For owners, the practical benefit comes down to aircraft availability. Every hour an aircraft spends in maintenance is an hour it cannot serve a flight request. Reducing turnaround times directly improves dispatch reliability, a metric NetJets has consistently emphasized in its communications with shareowners.

 

 

Fleet Growth Driving the Expansion

 

NetJets operates one of the largest private jet fleets in the world. The company has placed substantial aircraft orders with multiple manufacturers over the past several years, including a landmark agreement with Textron Aviation for Cessna Citation jets and ongoing deliveries from Embraer and Bombardier.

 

Each new airframe entering service adds to the maintenance workload. Scheduled inspections, component overhauls, avionics updates, and unscheduled repairs all accumulate as the fleet expands. Without proportional growth in MRO capacity, the operator would face mounting delays.

 

The Reading facility addresses that capacity question in a geographically strategic location. Pennsylvania sits within short flight distance of major business aviation markets in New York, New Jersey, Washington DC, Boston, and the wider mid-Atlantic region. Repositioning aircraft to Reading for scheduled work takes minimal time compared to sending them to facilities further inland.

 

 

Industry Context

 

The broader business aviation MRO sector has been undergoing significant change. Major providers, including Duncan Aviation, West Star Aviation, and StandardAero, have all announced facility expansions in recent years. Manufacturers themselves continue to grow their authorized service center networks, with Textron, Bombardier, Embraer, and Gulfstream all adding capacity.

 

NetJets choosing to build internal capability rather than rely entirely on those providers reflects a calculation about scale. With hundreds of aircraft in service and more on order, the company has the volume to justify owning the infrastructure. Smaller operators typically lack that justification and continue to use third-party shops.

 

The decision also gives NetJets greater control over quality standards and turnaround consistency. Internal facilities can be configured specifically around the types in the fleet, with parts pre-positioned and procedures standardized across locations.

 

 

What to Watch Next

 

Enthusiasts following NetJets will want to monitor how the Reading operation scales over the coming months. Initial launches at maintenance facilities typically begin with a limited scope of work before expanding to cover more inspection levels and aircraft types as staffing and tooling build up.

 

Hiring patterns at Reading will offer one indicator of the facility's eventual size. Equipment installations, hangar expansions, and any announced partnerships with local technical schools will provide additional signals about long-term plans.

 

The operator has not publicly detailed how many aircraft the Reading site will be capable of handling at full operational capacity, nor has it specified the full range of inspections and repairs the facility will perform. Those details will likely emerge as the operation matures.

 

For now, the launch confirms that NetJets continues to invest in the operational backbone required to support a fleet that shows no signs of slowing its growth. As fractional ownership demand remains strong and new aircraft continue to roll off production lines, the maintenance side of the business will only become more central to keeping owners flying on schedule.

 

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Kalum Shashi Ishara
I am an Aircraft Engineering graduate and an alumnus of Kingston University. It was a passion that I have had since childhood driven me to realise this goal of working in the Aviation and Aerospace industry. I have been working in the industry for more than 13 years now, and I can easily identify most commercial aircraft by spotting them from a distance. My work experience involved both technical and managerial elements of Aircraft component manufacturing, Quality assurance and continuous improvement management.

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