1982 BEECHCRAFT Bonanza B36TC 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
- 1982
- Make
- Beechcraft
- Model
- Bonanza B36TC
- Total Time
- 5,850 hr
- Location
- Germany
- Seller
- Beautiful Beech
- Source
- globalplanesearch.com
Listing closed
View similar Bonanza B36TC for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 6
- Cruise
- 186 kts
- Max Speed
- 199 kts
- Range
- 1,060 nm
- Ceiling
- 25,000 ft
- Fuel
- 102.0 gal
- Burn
- 17.0 gph
- Engines
- 1 · Piston
- Power
- 300 hp
- MTOW
- 3,850 lbs
- ICAO Type
- BE36
Manufacturer-published specs for the Beechcraft Bonanza B36TC model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $200
- Annual Fixed
- $24,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $38,000
- TBO
- 1,700 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Beechcraft Bonanza B36TC. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Beechcraft Bonanza B36TC typical:
$220,071 – $750,000
median $389,000
across 17 active listings
Description
Beautiful Beech B36TC aircraft for sale IFR equipped and regular flown during the last years. Aircraft operated only by 3 professional pilots, no pilot training performed during the ownership. Airplane time state: TT: 5850 hrs - will be still flown Engine Continental TSIO-520-UB, ETT: 1500hrs Propeller Mc Cauley 3A32C406-C, PTT: 280hrs
About the Beechcraft Bonanza B36TC
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 1979–2002.