Beechcraft King Air C90 Aircraft in Arizona

Arizona is favoured for aircraft long-term storage and preservation due to its dry desert climate. Major aviation infrastructure in Phoenix, Tucson, Prescott. The state hosts significant aircraft boneyards (Davis-Monthan) and a strong aircraft restoration/refurbishment industry. Phoenix is a major aircraft transaction hub.

· 8-seat · updated recently

← Beechcraft King Air 90 family

About the Beechcraft King Air C90

The Beechcraft King Air C90 series is the entry point into the most successful turboprop family in aviation history. The C90 is a twin-engine, pressurized, six-to-eight seat turboprop powered by two Pratt and Whitney PT6A-21 engines (550 SHP each) that cruises at 215 KTAS with a range of 1,260 nm at FL270. Since the original King Air 90 was introduced in 1964, the C90 family has been the go-to aircraft for small corporate flight departments, charter operators, and owner-pilots stepping up from piston twins to turbine reliability. Over 2,000 King Air 90-series aircraft have been delivered.

Key variants. The C90 (1971-1982) established the platform. The C90A (1982-1992) improved the engine and systems. The C90B (1992-1994) added four-blade propellers and improved noise levels. The C90GT (2005-2008) upgraded to PT6A-135A engines (550 SHP) and Rockwell Collins Pro Line 21 avionics. The C90GTi (2008-2016) further refined the avionics. The C90GTx (2017-present) is the current production model with Innovative Solutions and Support (IS&S) glass cockpit displays and autothrottle.

Why the King Air C90. PT6A engine reliability is legendary — these engines routinely reach 8,000+ hours between overhauls on condition, with 99.95%+ dispatch reliability. Twin-engine safety, cabin pressurization to 4.0 psi differential (cabin altitude of 10,000 feet at FL220), and all-weather capability make the C90 a genuine step up from any piston aircraft. The King Air can operate from short and unimproved strips that jets cannot access. The global King Air support network is the largest for any turboprop.

Buying advice. PT6A engine condition is the primary value driver — verify hot section inspection (HSI) status, compressor turbine (CT) blade condition, and prop governor function. The C90 uses the smaller PT6A-21/135A (versus the -42/-52 in larger King Airs) — parts and overhaul costs are proportionally lower but still significant ($200,000-$350,000 per engine overhaul). Propeller overhaul (Hartzell or McCauley four-blade) runs $25,000-$40,000 per side. Check for spar strap compliance, wing deice boot condition, and pressurization system integrity.

Market. C90A: $400,000-$800,000. C90B: $600,000-$1.2M. C90GT: $1.2M-$2M. C90GTi/GTx: $2M-$3.5M. Beechcraft King Air C90 operating costs run $800-$1,200/hr all-in. A King Air C90 for sale is the most affordable way into turboprop twin ownership.

Beechcraft King Air C90 helicopter for sale

Beechcraft King Air C90 Specifications

Model spec

The Beechcraft King Air C90 is a 8-seat multi engine turboprop with a cruise speed of 215–260 kt (398–482 km/h), a range of 1,060–1,207 nm (1,963–2,235 km), and a useful load of 2,700 lbs (1,225 kg).

Performance
Cruise215–260 kt (398–482 km/h)
Max Speed226–272 kt (419–504 km/h)
Range1,060–1,207 nm (1,963–2,235 km)
Service Ceiling28,100–30,000 ft (8,565–9,144 m)
Engine & Fuel
Horsepower550 HP
Fuel Capacity384.0 gal (1,453 L)
Fuel Burn60.0–68.0 GPH (227–257 L/h)
TBO3,500–3,600 hrs
ICAO TypeBE9L
Weights & Seats
Seats7–10
Max Gross Weight10,100 lbs (4,581 kg)
Useful Load2,700 lbs (1,225 kg)
Production1964–present

Beechcraft King Air C90 Listings

No Beechcraft King Air C90 currently listed for sale.

This page updates automatically the moment one is listed — check back soon, or browse the Beechcraft range.

Beechcraft King Air C90 Variants

Variant Years Seats Cruise Range Useful load Price range Best for Listings for sale
King Air C90A 1984–1991 10 234 kts (433 km/h) 1,207 nm (2,235 km) $789K – $2.5M Mid-generation C90 — accessible PT6 turbine with solid support. 21
King Air C90B 1992–2005 10 234 kts (433 km/h) 1,207 nm (2,235 km) $995K – $2.9M Refined C90 with better props and interior — a popular owner-flown turbine. 20
King Air C90GT 2009–now 10 260 kts (482 km/h) 1,150 nm (2,130 km) from $3.7M A late 90-series King Air with more powerful engines — a light twin turboprop at an accessible point in the King Air line. 6
King Air C90GTI 2007–now 7 215 kts (398 km/h) 1,060 nm (1,963 km) 2,700 lbs (1,225 kg) from $2.2M A late, glass-panel 90-series King Air — a light twin turboprop with an updated flight deck, at an accessible point in the King Air line. 4
King Air C90GTx 2009–now 10 260 kts (482 km/h) 1,150 nm (2,130 km) $2.9M – $3.6M Modern glass-cockpit C90 — the latest, best-equipped light King Air. 13

Compare Beechcraft King Air C90

See how the Beechcraft King Air C90 stacks up against similar aircraft in specs, price, and operating costs.

⏲ Compare Beechcraft King Air 90 generations →

Beechcraft King Air C90 Price & Cost

Beechcraft King Air C90 Price Guide

Key price factors: engine time to overhaul, year and airframe hours, avionics, damage history and logbook completeness — see the buying guide below for the full pre-purchase checklist.

Beechcraft King Air C90 Cost of Ownership estimate
Fuel (60.0 GPH × $6.20, 100 hrs)$37,200/yr
Annual Fixed (hangar, insurance, annual)$150,000/yr
Variable (per hour)$800/hr
Engine Overhaul (every 3,500 hrs)$350,000
Estimates at 100 flight hours/year. Actual costs vary by usage, location and insurance.

Beechcraft King Air C90 Value by Model Year

Median asking price by year of manufacture. Newer airframes command a premium; value falls with age then plateaus on older models.

$3699K $2597K $1495K
$1495K
$2022K
$2198K
$3595K
$3295K
$3699K
’90
’08
’13

Lowest around $1,495,000 (1990 models) · highest around $3,699,000 (2014). Bars scaled across the range to show the depreciation curve; hover for exact medians.

Buying a Used Beechcraft King Air C90

Buying a Beechcraft King Air C90 centres on its turbine engine(s) — time to overhaul, hot-section history and any engine maintenance program — alongside airframe hours and cycles.

What to check before buying

  • Turbine engine status — hot-section and overhaul time, trend monitoring and whether the engine is on a maintenance program.
  • Airframe hours & cycles — high-utilisation turboprops accumulate cycles quickly; cycles can matter more than hours.
  • Equipment — cargo pod, floats/amphibian gear, de-ice and avionics all affect value.
  • Corrosion & logbooks — continuous records and a corrosion inspection, especially on float or marine-operated aircraft.
  • Pre-buy inspection — commission an independent pre-buy by a type-experienced shop.

Frequently Asked Questions — Beechcraft King Air C90

How does the King Air C90 differ from the C90A and later variants?
The C90 (1971-1982) uses PT6A-21 engines with three-blade props and earlier avionics. The C90A (1984+) added improved environmental systems and minor refinements. Used C90s trade for $400-800K — the cheapest entry into twin turboprop ownership. Maintenance costs average $488/hr, and the four-phase 200-hour inspection cycle keeps costs predictable.
What should I budget annually for a King Air C90?
At 100 hours/year, expect $235-295K total ($2,350-2,950/hr). Fixed costs are $65-85K annually (insurance $18-25K, hangar $28-36K, annuals $14-18K). Fuel runs about $454/hr, maintenance labor $240/hr, and parts $383/hr. The PT6A-21 engines have excellent TBO history and widespread overhaul shop support.
Is a 1970s King Air C90 still a practical purchase?
Yes — the King Air airframe is remarkably durable and well-supported by Textron and independent shops. The key is avionics: a 1970s panel will need $150-300K in upgrades (G950 or similar) to remain practical for IFR operations. Budget for avionics when comparing to newer C90B/GTi models that already have modern glass cockpits.

Beechcraft King Air C90 Inventory by Country

United States108
Germany11
Australia3
Canada2
Ecuador2
Brazil2

Beechcraft King Air C90 Inventory by State

Florida23
California10
Virginia6
Texas6
Kansas4
Arkansas4
South Carolina4
Connecticut3
Minnesota3
Illinois2
Arizona2
Colorado2

Beechcraft King Air C90 by Price

Under $300k2
Under $500k5

Recently Sold Beechcraft King Air C90

2005 King Air C90B$1,950,000
1971 King Air C90$659,000
1994 King Air C90B$1,026,229
1991 King Air C90A$1,589,000

Beechcraft King Air C90 Safety Record

No NTSB events on record for the Beechcraft King Air C90. Individual aircraft safety records may be available on detail pages.

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

Disclaimer: All prices, cost estimates, and market values shown are based on asking prices from third-party sources and are provided for informational purposes only. AeroGurus is not an appraiser, broker, or financial advisor. Always obtain a professional appraisal and independent inspection before making a purchase decision.
Listings last refreshed recently · Data: FAA Registry, NTSB · About our data