Overwater Missions
Reliable travel with three-engine redundancy for safety.

Year built (YOM)
1982
Refit years
2016 / 2013
Passengers
9 seats
Serial number (MSN)
92
Previous registration
T7-FGD, N929ML
Luggage
Baggage
Registration country
United States of America
Estimated rental price
4,400 € / hour
5,192 $ / hour
Find your scenario
Reliable travel with three-engine redundancy for safety.
Nonstop or one-stop flights for 6–9 passengers.
Access to airports with shorter runways and operational constraints.
Ideal for intercontinental and transoceanic routes.
Measurement system:
Range
6,300 km
Cruise Speed
850 km/h
Service Ceiling
13,800 m
Takeoff weight
14,600 kg
Number of Engines
3
Engine Model
Honeywell TFE731-3-1C/TFE731-40

Falcon 50 with tail number N92CJ (serial number 92) belongs to the Super Midsize Jet class and is operated by Club Jet Charter, LLC. The aircraft is based at (FCM, United States) and is available for commercial charter.
The registration prefix N indicates that the aircraft is registered in United States of America. The first letters of any tail number correspond to the country’s aviation registry.
Charter availability for this aircraft is provided by Club Jet Charter, LLC. However, clients can book this jet directly through JETVIP — a professional international charter brokerage platform. We negotiate with operators, secure the best available terms, track real-time availability and ensure competitive and transparent pricing for our clients.
The Falcon 50 holds a popularity rating of 3.9 out of 5 and a reliability rating of 89.0 out of 100 according to the JETVIP Reliability Index , reflecting strong demand and operational stability in the charter market.
The aircraft was manufactured in 1982. The cabin interior was updated in 2016. The exterior was updated in 2013. Previously, the aircraft operated under registration ex T7-FGD, N929ML.
Falcon 50 N92CJ accommodates up to 9 passengers. The baggage compartment volume of 2.0 m³ can hold up to 5 large suitcases . The maximum flight range reaches 6300 km, depending on payload and weather conditions.
The aircraft is powered by 3Honeywell TFE731-3-1C/TFE731-40 engines , ensuring efficiency and reliability on long-distance routes.
Available onboard amenities include Cabin crew , Hot meal , Lavatory .
To check the availability and charter rates of N92CJ, contact JETVIP — we will provide the best offer tailored to your trip.
Regular overwater or remote-region missions where three-engine redundancy and routing flexibility matter
Nonstop or one-stop business travel with 6–9 passengers plus baggage on longer legs
Airports with shorter runways or operational constraints where performance margins are valuable
The Falcon 50 is a classic Dassault tri‑jet designed to combine intercontinental-style legs with access to a wider set of airports than many contemporaries. Its defining attributes are a third engine for added redundancy on remote and overwater routings, a wing optimized for higher-altitude cruise, and a systems philosophy aimed at dependable dispatch in varied weather and runway conditions. Today it typically appeals to operators who value range and routing flexibility in a proven airframe, and who are comfortable with legacy avionics and cabin standards relative to newer designs.
In practical use, the Falcon 50 fits missions that mix longer stage lengths with airport access needs, including island, northern, or developing-region operations where alternates and weather can drive conservative planning. It can be an effective tool for transoceanic or transcontinental routing with appropriate equipment and approvals. It is less compelling when the mission is dominated by short hops, high-frequency charter-style cycles, or when passengers expect modern cabin amenities and low acoustic levels without upgrades.
Cabin layout typically supports a club seating arrangement with an additional seating group aft, plus an enclosed lavatory. The cabin is generally regarded as comfortable for midsize-to-large-cabin class travel of its generation, with good baggage capacity and the ability to carry coats and catering equipment. Noise levels, cabin electronics, and connectivity depend heavily on refurbishment and avionics/cabin retrofit history; many aircraft have been updated with modern interiors and in-cabin power, while others remain largely original.
The Falcon 50 reflects an earlier generation of Dassault design: robust systems, strong high-altitude performance, and a flight deck originally centered on analog instruments with later digital upgrades available. Many aircraft have been retrofitted with modern navigation, surveillance, and flight management features to meet current airspace mandates and improve workload, but the fleet is not standardized. The buying focus is less about a single factory avionics baseline and more about the specific upgrade path and documentation of the individual airframe.
Operationally, the Falcon 50 is often used for longer legs at high cruise altitudes with passenger loads in the typical business-jet range. The tri‑jet architecture can support conservative planning for remote routing, but it also brings additional engine-related inspection and support considerations versus a comparable twin. Dispatch reliability and trip economics depend strongly on engine program status, maintenance tracking quality, and how extensively the aircraft has been modernized. For many operators, the aircraft is most compelling when flown enough to justify dedicated support and disciplined maintenance planning, rather than occasional discretionary use.
Rent price
The cost is calculated for a one-way flight for 3 passengers based on historical data for this type of aircraft. The final price will be offered by the manager.
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