1977 CESSNA 182Q SOLD
No longer listed as of April 2026. The price below is the last asking price — the final sale price is not disclosed.
SOLD · last asking $184,950 · Apr 2026
Last asking price
$184,950
Great Deal
- Year
- 1977
- Make
- Cessna
- Model
- 182Q
- Total Time
- 1,822 hr
- Location
- Ashland, VA
- Seller
- Phil Solomon Aircraft Brokerage
- Source
- trade-a-plane.com
Listing closed
View similar 182Q for sale →
Performance & Capacity
- Seats
- 4
- Cruise
- 140 kts
- Max Speed
- 112 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 182Q 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 182Q. Actual costs vary by location, usage, maintenance history, and configuration.
Market price band
Cessna 182Q typical:
$26,853 – $600,000
median $295,000
across 46 active listings
This listing at $184,950 is 37% below median.
Description
SOLD SOLD SOLD! Light Sport eligible and very low time Cessna 182 (1,822 hours TTAF and 305 SMOH) with avionics upgrades including Garmin GMA345, Garmin 430W, Garmin GTX335 (ADS-B out), Garmin G5 along with a MK12E Nav/com and S-Tec 50 dual axis autopilot with GPSS and altitude hold. Engine monitoring is done with a combination of electronic and analog instruments including a fuel computer. Both paint and interior are in good condition (both about 7.5/10) with some small sections of peeled paint. The plane does have damage history including a new firewall that was professionally replaced following a hard landing a few years ago. This nice flying plane is being offered at below market price for a swift sale as the current owner does not fly it often.
About the Cessna 182Q
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 1978–1982.