1979 CESSNA P210 SOLD
No longer listed as of March 2026. The price below is the last asking price — the final sale price is not disclosed.
SOLD · Mar 2026
Call for Price
- Year
- 1979
- Make
- Cessna
- Model
- P210
- Seller
- For Sale
- Source
- globalplanesearch.com
Listing closed
View similar P210 for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 6
- Cruise
- 180 kts
- Max Speed
- 190 kts
- Range
- 850 nm
- Ceiling
- 23,000 ft
- Useful Load
- 1,200 lbs
- Fuel
- 90.0 gal
- Burn
- 16.0 gph
- Engines
- 1 · Piston (Turbocharged)
- Power
- 310 hp
- MTOW
- 4,000 lbs
- ICAO Type
- P210
Manufacturer-published specs for the Cessna P210 model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $190
- Annual Fixed
- $22,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $35,000
- TBO
- 1,400 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Cessna P210. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Cessna P210 typical:
$180,000 – $975,000
median $248,000
across 23 active listings
Description
For Sale is this Beautiful one of a kind Cessna P210N. Highlights: Speed Brakes, Weather Radar, Tip Tanks, Fully loaded IFR Panel and a Riley Intercooler! Interior is fully covered in Conolly Leather known from Rolls Royce! Paint is in exceptional condition Airplane time state: Model year: 1979 Aircraft Total Time: ca 3,734hrs Engine: Continental TSIO-520-P, ETSO: ca 772hrs Propeller: McCauley D3A34C402-C, PTSO: ca 772hrs
About the Cessna P210
The Cessna 210 Centurion is the fastest single-engine piston aircraft Cessna ever mass-produced — a six-seat, high-wing retractable that cruises at 170-175 KTAS on 14 GPH. Produced from 1960 to 1986 with over 9,200 delivered, the 210 remains the go-to choice for owner-pilots who need speed, payload, and range without stepping up to a twin or turboprop. Powered by a Continental IO-520-L (300 HP) in later naturally aspirated models or the TSIO-520 (310 HP turbo) in the T210/P210, the Centurion carries more weight faster than a Bonanza A36 — and does it from the comfortable, stable high-wing Cessna platform.
Key variants. The 210A-G (1960-1967) are the strut-braced early models with a simpler gear system. The 210H-N (1968-1986) are the cantilever-wing models with the more complex gear system — faster, cleaner, and harder to maintain. The 210N is the final and most refined naturally aspirated variant. The T210 series added turbocharging for high-altitude operations. The P210 Pressurized Centurion (1978-1986) is the only factory-pressurized single-engine piston Cessna — a 210 airframe with a TSIO-520-CE/AF engine, 3.35 psi differential, and cabin altitude of 12,000 feet at FL230. The P210N and P210R (with Rolls Royce 250 turbine conversions by Soloy or Silver Eagle) command premium prices.
What makes the 210 compelling. No other high-wing retractable single carries 1,200+ lbs of useful load at 170 KTAS. The 210 is the aircraft bush operators choose when a 206 is too slow and a twin is too expensive. The cabin is generous — wider than a Bonanza, with genuine six-seat capability.
Buying advice. The 210 landing gear is the most critical pre-buy item. The late-model cantilever gear (210K-N) uses a complex hydraulic retraction system that requires specialized maintenance. Gear saddle cracking, actuator wear, and downlock switch adjustment are common issues. Budget $5,000-$15,000 for gear overhaul if compliance is not current. AD 2003-10-09 (landing gear saddle inspection) is mandatory. Continental IO-520/TSIO-520 engines are well-understood but prone to case cracking if not properly monitored. Check for fuel bladder condition and exhaust system cracks.
Market. 210N (1979-1986): $120,000-$200,000. T210N Turbo: $140,000-$240,000. P210N Pressurized: $150,000-$280,000. Clean P210 with modern avionics: $200,000-$350,000. Cessna 210 operating costs run $180-$220/hr all-in. A Cessna 210 for sale is a serious cross-country machine for experienced pilots who demand speed and load.
Produced 1978–1986. Total produced: 1,300.