1973 CESSNA 182P SOLD

No longer listed as of April 2026. The price below is the last asking price — the final sale price is not disclosed.

1973 CESSNA 182P (sold)
SOLD · last asking $219,000 · Apr 2026
Last asking price
$219,000
Year
1973
Make
Cessna
Model
182P
Total Time
10,034 hr
Location
Navasota, TX
Seller
J7 Aviation
Source
trade-a-plane.com
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Listing closed
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Performance & Capacity

Seats
4
Cruise
140 kts
Max Speed
120 kts
Range
915 nm
Useful Load
1,110 lbs
Burn
12.0 gph
Engines
1 · Reciprocating
Power
230 hp
MTOW
12,500 lbs
ICAO Type
C182

Manufacturer-published specs for the Cessna 182P model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.

Operating Cost (est.)

Hourly Variable
$160
Annual Fixed
$20,000
Engine Overhaul
$32,000
TBO
2,000 hrs

AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Cessna 182P. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.

Market price band

Cessna 182P typical: $14,500 – $580,000 median $230,000 across 64 active listings

This listing at $219,000 is near median.

Description

Beautiful, well kept and maintained, No Damage History C182. This Texas based example boasts, recent fresh pain, fresh interior, excellent glass and a recent complete panel upgrade including a modern up to date Garmin avionics suite, Garmin GFC 500 A/P, Dual G5s, Garmin 750XI and a JPI engine monitor. Mid time engine and a recent prop overhaul. These types of upgrades and combined with great engine and prop times is becoming increasingly difficult to find in a 182. This aircraft truly is turnkey and ready to go into service and fly away. She represents a tremendous value for the dollar. Complete, well organized and continual logbooks back to day 1. Logbooks available for review, via e-mail, on request.

About the Cessna 182P

The Cessna 182 Skylane is the natural step-up from the 172 Skyhawk — same forgiving high-wing design, but with a Lycoming O-540-AB1A5 engine producing 230 HP that transforms capability. In production since 1956 with over 23,000 delivered, the 182 carries four adults, full fuel, and baggage without the weight-and-balance compromises that plague the 172. Cruise speed jumps to 140 KTAS on 12-14 GPH, and the useful load exceeds 1,000 lbs in most configurations. Key variants span seven decades. The early 182A-P (1956-1986) are straight-tail and swept-tail models with Continental O-470-R/S engines (230 HP). The 182Q/R (1977-1986) improved the panel and systems. Production resumed in 1997 with the 182S (Lycoming IO-540-AB1A5), and the 182T (2001+) brought the Garmin G1000 glass cockpit. The T182T Turbo Skylane adds a Lycoming TIO-540-AK1A (235 HP turbocharged) for high-altitude cruise at 156 KTAS and FL200 capability. The 182 Skylane is also popular on floats — its 230 HP provides adequate performance for amphibious operations. Buying advice. On Continental-powered models (pre-1997), check for cylinder cracking and case through-bolt corrosion — the O-470 is a reliable engine but requires diligent maintenance. On Lycoming-powered models, verify compliance with Lycoming SB 632 (valve train inspection). Common airframe items: nose gear shimmy damper, cowl flap cables, and exhaust system cracks. The landing gear on fixed-gear 182s is robust but the retractable 182RG requires careful pre-buy of gear actuator and squat switch systems. Market pricing. 1970s 182P/Q with mid-time engine: $60,000-$100,000. 1990s-2000s 182S: $150,000-$250,000. 182T with G1000: $250,000-$400,000. T182T Turbo: $280,000-$430,000. The Cessna 182 for sale market is deep and liquid — it is the most popular four-seat step-up aircraft in general aviation. Cessna 182 operating costs run approximately $150-$180/hr including fuel, maintenance reserves, and insurance.

Produced 1972–1976.