Yellow Cub aircraft scene with homepage headline and subheadline
General aviation only Source-linked research
Choose your flight path

Pick the starting point that matches how you think about the market right now, then drop into the workflow built for it.

I'm researching a specific aircraft

Understand the real market around one aircraft before you call, travel, or make an offer.

  • See what is still for sale right now
  • Compare against the nearest market evidence
  • Open the original listing and dig deeper
Research an aircraft

I want to know what mine is worth

Build a comparison group around your exact airplane and judge value from real market evidence, not rules of thumb.

  • Define your subtype, year, TT, engine, and avionics
  • Control what belongs in the comparison group
  • See where your aircraft sits against sold and active comparisons
Value my aircraft

I have a budget and need realistic categories and options

Start with real money, narrow by objective aircraft categories, then see which families are actually in reach.

  • Use a low-to-high budget range
  • Browse by canonical aircraft category first
  • See which aircraft families are actually available before chasing listings
Browse by budget
Why PlaneComps

Built for the part of aviation where the market is fascinating and the pricing is messy.

GA people do this work manually all the time: opening listings, comparing panels, checking year groups, remembering what seemed overpriced, and trying to work out what sold aircraft were really worth. PlaneComps should make that process easier, faster, and far more grounded.

Who it is for

People who follow the GA market because they are buying, selling, owning, advising, or simply obsessed with aircraft and want a better way to understand what is happening.

Account tools

Save the aircraft, searches, and market views you keep coming back to.

Serious shoppers rarely stop at one session. The site should remember the work so you can reopen it without rebuilding everything.

  • Save aircraft, comparison groups, and budget views
  • Watch listings for new matches and price cuts
  • Reopen a pricing view without rebuilding the inputs
Saved searches Watchlists Shared reports
Pricing

Built to take months of aircraft shopping and pricing work and make it feel manageable.

The right airplane can take months to find. PlaneComps is designed to cut down the manual work with one aggregated search, historical asking prices, structured comparisons, and clearer price context without forcing people into a heavy professional-data subscription.

A lighter price point than traditional valuation tools

People should not have to step up to a four-figure annual subscription just to feel more confident buying, selling, or tracking the GA market. PlaneComps should feel approachable enough to try, then affordable enough to keep using while the search, sale, or ownership decision unfolds.

7-day trial

$0
full access for 7 days
  • Try all three journeys
  • Run one search across a broad market and open the historical comparisons behind it
  • See whether PlaneComps reduces the work of how you shop, price, or follow aircraft

Monthly

$15
per month
  • Full access after the trial ends
  • Saved research, alerts, pricing workbench tools, and historical price context
  • Best if you want flexibility while you shop, buy, or sell
Trust and limits

Clear enough to act on. Honest enough to trust.

The product should help someone move faster without pretending certainty we do not have. The right tone is confident, grounded, and candid about where the evidence is strong or thin.

Not an appraisal

PlaneComps is a market research tool built from listing behavior, comparisons, and structured aircraft details. It should help with judgment, not pretend to replace a formal appraisal.

Evidence depth varies

Some aircraft families support rich comparisons. Thin markets should say so plainly instead of acting more precise than the data allows.

Source-linked by design

The strongest claims should always lead back to comparisons, listings, and the comparison group behind the read.