The aviation industry has spent decades sorting passengers into familiar boxes: Economy, Premium Economy, Business Class, First Class, Charter, and Private – each defined by a distinct price point and level of service. But Magnifica Air, an Orlando-based startup planning to launch scheduled Part 121 service in Q3 2027, believes there is a gap between all of them. The company is betting hundreds of millions of dollars that it can fill it.

The model is straightforward on paper. A fleet of new Airbus A220 and A321 aircraft configured for roughly 56 to 60 seats would be sold by the seat on scheduled routes to six cities initially, alongside a membership called the Seven Club. But the pitch extends even more, into a category it calls "Private Class."
"We're not going to be economy plus, we're not going to be business, and we're not going to be first," said Sean McGeough, Chief Development Officer at Magnifica Air, during a recent webinar hosted by AeroXplorer. "We're going to create a whole new segment, which really is the best of both worlds."

What is Private Class?
McGeough frames the positioning around a specific price band. Magnifica expects its tickets to cost two to three times as much as a domestic first-class seat, while remaining about four times cheaper than chartering a private aircraft for two or three passengers.
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"We're going to be 2-3 times more than what a first class ticket will be flying in North America, but we'll be four times less than, say, chartering your own airplane for two people or three people," McGeough said. He added, "We really believe that's going to open up a new opportunity."

That space between commercial premium and private travel is where Magnifica is looking to sit. The aircraft will be reconfigured from the factory without overhead bins, and an Aviation Clean Air pathogen removal system – a technology that already exists on private jets – will be installed. The goal is a cabin that feels nothing like a commercial airliner.
The ground experience is being rebuilt, too. Instead of routing passengers through a commercial terminal, Magnifica plans to operate out of its own Fixed Base Operator(FBO) infrastructure, with its own TSA screening and black car service. McGeough describes the company's target scenario, where passengers can show up to the airport just 10-15 minutes before departure.

“We'll have 60 passengers show up at our FBO, we'll have our own TSA that we'll manage ourselves, and we'll have a black car service where you show up 10 or 15 minutes before the flight, and we'll fly city to city. We want people to leave thinking, 'what a great experience' – in some cases, 'why did I want to get off the plane so quickly?'”
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Not a Competitor
Magnifica is careful not to frame itself as a threat to the existing private aviation ecosystem. McGeough sees the product as an additional service, something operators and fractional members might use alongside their existing memberships rather than instead of them.
He elaborated, "I'm not saying whole airplane owners will sell the airplanes, but we do want to give them that option … I do agree there will be times when flying private makes more sense than flying commercial. And there will be times when people will fly us as opposed to setting the airplane back to get their family or get some business colleagues."

Thus, Magnifica suggests that its early passengers are currently flying private in some form, whether through a WheelsUp membership, Flexjet subscription, or fractional ownership. The early-stage goal is to convince these travelers to add a Magnifica seat to their travel toolkit for certain routes rather than reposition an airplane.
"They might even buy their own airplane," he said. "But we're going to offer a whole new segment of airplane class that, quite frankly, this market needs and is prepared to pay for."
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Magnifica's Bet
It is apparent that Magnifica's value proposition lies in the new demographic it is trying to shape. McGeough points to younger, affluent travelers who are spending on experiences in ways that his generation did not, citing the willingness of someone earning $60,000 a year to spend $800 on a luxury bag. He argues that the same logic applies to how the next wave of premium travelers will approach air travel.
The customer Magnifica is chasing is not necessarily someone who frequently flies private. It is someone who has experienced the best of commercial aviation, found it lacking against international standards, and is ready to pay more for something that actually delivers.

Whether Magnifica can build the infrastructure, hire the people, and price the product precisely enough to become the leader in this space remains to be seen. But the category definition and the target demographic are clear.
It won't be semi-private. It won't be first class. It won't be charter. Private Class will be in its own lane and will seek to prove itself in the premium travel market as soon as the first flight departs in 2027.
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