1976 CESSNA 421C SOLD
No longer listed as of May 2026. The price below is the last asking price — the final sale price is not disclosed.
No photo available
Contact for Price
- Year
- 1976
- Make
- Cessna
- Model
- 421C
- Total Time
- 2,448 hr
- Location
- Germany
- Seller
- Liam Kelly
- Source
- avpay.aero
Listing closed
View similar 421C for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 8
- Cruise
- 230 kts
- Range
- 1,385 nm
- Useful Load
- 2,450 lbs
- Burn
- 35.0 gph
- Engines
- 2 · Piston
- Power
- 375 hp
- MTOW
- 12,500 lbs
- ICAO Type
- C421
Manufacturer-published specs for the Cessna 421C model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $400
- Annual Fixed
- $35,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $50,000
- TBO
- 1,600 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Cessna 421C. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Cessna 421C typical:
$100,000 – $749,000
median $474,950
across 67 active listings
Description
Airframe
Make – Cessna
Model – C421C Golden Eagle
Year – 1976
Registration – N262MC
Airframe Hours – 2448h TT
Engine
Type – Continental GTSIO-520
Hours – 964h SMOH
Power – 285 HP
Propeller
Type – McCauley 3FF32C
Hours – 964h SOH
Avionics
GARMIN GNS-530W 2x
GARMIN GTC330
RADAR 2000 Vp Weather Radar
WX500 Stormscope
King KR-87
King KMA-24
King KT71TSO
King KN62A
Sperry AA-215 Radar Altimeter
IFCS800 Auto Pilot
ME 406 ELT
Emergency Power Supply
Inspection Status
Annual Due – 12/2022
ARC Due – 12/2022
Interior
Seating for eight including the belted potty there is plenty of room for passengers and bags.
About the Cessna 421C
The Cessna 421 Golden Eagle is a pressurized, twin-engine piston aircraft that was the flagship of Cessna's piston twin lineup from 1968 to 1985. Powered by two Continental GTSIO-520-H/L engines (375 HP each, geared and turbocharged), the 421C (final variant) cruises at 230 KTAS at FL240 with cabin pressurization of 4.2 psi differential — true all-weather, high-altitude piston twin performance. The cabin seats six to eight passengers in club seating with a stand-up aisle, air conditioning, and flushing lavatory. Over 1,900 were built across all variants.
Key variants. The 421 (1968-1971) and 421A (1969-1971) were the originals. The 421B (1971-1975) improved the cabin and systems. The 421C Golden Eagle (1976-1985) is the most refined — bonded wet wing (no bladders), improved gear system, longer cabin, and more powerful GTSIO-520-L engines. The 421C is by far the most desirable variant.
Why the 421 still has a following. Nothing else delivers pressurized, twin-engine, jet-like capability at piston operating costs. The 421C cruises above most weather at FL240 with six passengers in a cabin comparable to a small business jet. For owners who need pressurization but cannot justify turboprop operating costs ($800-$1,200/hr), the 421 operates at $400-$600/hr all-in.
Buying advice. The GTSIO-520 engines are the 421's Achilles heel — they are the most complex piston engines ever produced (geared, turbocharged, fuel-injected) with a 1,600-hour TBO that is rarely reached without significant top-end work. Engine overhaul costs $70,000-$90,000 per side. Gearbox adapter plate cracking and propeller governor issues are known failure modes. Check for exhaust system cracks, turbocharger condition, and intercooler integrity. The pressurization system (boots, outflow valve, door seal) must be tested during pre-buy flight. Corrosion at the wing spar carry-through is a potential deal-breaker.
Market. Cessna 421B: $80,000-$180,000. 421C: $120,000-$300,000. Premium 421C with modern avionics and mid-time engines: $200,000-$400,000. A Cessna 421 for sale is a compelling alternative to a turboprop — but only for buyers prepared for the engine maintenance demands.
Produced 1976–1985.