1991 BEECHCRAFT Bonanza F33A SOLD
No longer listed as of April 2026. The price below is the last asking price — the final sale price is not disclosed.
No photo available
Last asking price
$275,000
Fair Price
- Year
- 1991
- Make
- Beechcraft
- Model
- Bonanza F33A
- Location
- Port Elizabeth, South Africa
- Seller
- Patrick Davidson
- Source
- controller.com
Listing closed
View similar Bonanza F33A for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 5
- Cruise
- 172 kts
- Max Speed
- 182 kts
- Range
- 717 nm
- Ceiling
- 18,000 ft
- Fuel
- 74.0 gal
- Burn
- 14.0 gph
- Engines
- 1 · Piston
- Power
- 285 hp
- MTOW
- 3,400 lbs
- ICAO Type
- BE33
Manufacturer-published specs for the Beechcraft Bonanza F33A model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $160
- Annual Fixed
- $20,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $32,000
- TBO
- 1,500 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Beechcraft Bonanza F33A. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Beechcraft Bonanza F33A typical:
$145,000 – $565,000
median $247,450
across 52 active listings
This listing at $275,000 is 11% above median.
Description
1991 4+1 seater Bonanza (S/N CE-1544) with Continental IO-550-B (300 H.P.) engine with Gami fuel injectors, and a Hartzell PHC-C3YF-1RF propeller.
Subject to VAT if sold in South Africa. Able to assist with shipping and packing.
About the Beechcraft Bonanza F33A
The Beechcraft Bonanza is the longest continuously produced airplane in history — manufactured without interruption since 1947, spanning more than 17,000 deliveries. The Model 36 Bonanza is the six-seat, straight-tail, high-performance single that defines owner-flown aviation at its finest. Powered by a Continental IO-550-B (300 HP), the Bonanza cruises at 174 KTAS on 14.5 GPH with a useful load of 1,030 lbs. It competes with the Cirrus SR22 and Cessna 182 — but the Bonanza offers retractable gear, constant-speed prop, and a build quality that justifies its premium price.
The 36 lineage. The Model 36 (1968-1979) was the original straight-tail six-seater. The A36 (1970-2005) became the standard production model with detail improvements through multiple sub-variants. The A36TC and B36TC added turbocharging for high-altitude operations. The G36 (2006-present) is the current production model with Garmin G1000 NXi avionics, Continental IO-550-B engine, and premium interior. The F33A (1970-1994) is the four-seat Bonanza variant on a shorter fuselage, lighter, and slightly faster than the A36.
Why pilots love the Bonanza. The controls are perfectly harmonized — ailerons, elevator, and rudder respond proportionally with minimal adverse yaw. The retractable gear adds 15-20 knots over a fixed-gear Cessna. The cabin is wider than a Cirrus SR22 and the rear seats actually fit adults. The Bonanza is the airplane that experienced pilots graduate to when they outgrow a Cherokee or 182.
Buying advice. Bonanzas are complex aircraft requiring knowledgeable pre-buy inspections. Gear system condition is paramount — verify gear actuator motor, squat switch, and downlock mechanism. AD 2000-01-16 (stabilizer spar inspection) applies to certain models. Continental IO-550 engines require monitoring for crankshaft thrust bearing wear and cam/lifter spalling. Check for fuel bladder condition on all models. The Bonanza Society (ABS) is an outstanding owner resource.
Market. 1970s A36 with mid-time engine: $120,000-$200,000. 1990s A36 with modern avionics: $200,000-$350,000. G36 with G1000: $500,000-$850,000. F33A: $120,000-$250,000. A Beechcraft Bonanza for sale represents the pinnacle of owner-flown piston aviation — nothing else combines this level of performance, quality, and heritage.
Produced 1970–1994.