2015 BEECHCRAFT King Air 350i 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
Deal Pending
- Year
- 2015
- Make
- Beechcraft
- Model
- King Air 350i
- Total Time
- 6,404 hr
- Location
- NY
- Seller
- 5X5 Trading
- Source
- globalair.com
Listing closed
View similar King Air 350i for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 11
- Cruise
- 312 kts
- Max Speed
- 322 kts
- Range
- 1,806 nm
- Ceiling
- 35,000 ft
- Burn
- 115.0 gph
- Engines
- 2 · Turboprop
- Power
- 1050 hp
- MTOW
- 15,000 lbs
Manufacturer-published specs for the Beechcraft King Air 350i model. Actual aircraft may vary by configuration / modifications.
Operating Cost (est.)
- Hourly Variable
- $1,200
- Annual Fixed
- $220,000
- Engine Overhaul
- $450,000
- TBO
- 3,600 hrs
AeroGurus estimates based on industry averages for the Beechcraft King Air 350i. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Beechcraft King Air 350i typical:
$7,100,000 – $7,100,000
median $6,725,000
across 20 active listings
Description
Fresh Phase Inspections Newly Overhauled Propellers Excellent Paint & Interior Significant Time Remaining Until Engine Overhaul 1 U.S. (135) Owner
About the Beechcraft King Air 350i
The Beechcraft King Air 350 is the flagship of the most successful turboprop family in aviation history — a pressurized, twin-engine aircraft powered by two Pratt and Whitney PT6A-60A engines (1,050 SHP each) that seats up to 11 passengers in a stand-up cabin and cruises at 312 KTAS with a range of 1,806 nm. Produced since 1990 with over 900 delivered, the King Air 350 is the aircraft of choice for corporate flight departments, air ambulance operators, government agencies, and special missions worldwide.
Key variants. The King Air 350 (1990-2008): the original, with Rockwell Collins Pro Line II avionics. The King Air 350i (2009-2018): upgraded with Pro Line 21 avionics and improved interior. The King Air 350ER (extended range, additional fuel tanks). The King Air 360/360ER (2020-present): current production model with IS&S ThrustSense autothrottle, digital pressurization, and Innovative Solutions glass displays. The military C-12J and MC-12 Liberty are King Air 350 variants.
Why the 350 is the benchmark. The King Air 350 operates from runways as short as 3,300 feet — accessing hundreds of airports that jets cannot use. The T-tail design and powerful PT6A-60A engines provide excellent hot-and-high performance. Cabin altitude of 10,000 feet at FL350 with 6.5 psi differential pressurization. The square-oval fuselage cross-section provides a true stand-up cabin with a flat floor.
Buying advice. PT6A-60A engines are reliable but expensive — overhaul costs $400,000-$500,000 per engine. Verify engine program enrollment (Pratt and Whitney Eagle or MSP Gold). Propeller overhaul (four-blade Hartzell or McCauley) runs $35,000-$50,000 per side. Wing deice boot condition, pressurization system integrity, and avionics update status are key value drivers. The 350 landing gear uses a trailing-link design that provides excellent ride quality on rough runways but requires periodic inspection of the trunnion bearings.
Market. King Air 350 (pre-2008): $1.5M-$3.5M. 350i: $3.5M-$6M. 360: $7M-$9M. A Beechcraft King Air 350 for sale is the ultimate turboprop — nothing else combines this cabin size, range, and runway versatility. Operating costs run $1,200-$1,800/hr all-in.
Produced 2009–2019.