Cessna T182T Aircraft 2020s
Near-new (2020+) piston singles are the youngest fleet available — Cirrus SR22 GTS / G7 platform, Cessna 172/182 continuing production, Diamond DA50 RG (2020+), Mooney production attempts. Latest Garmin Perspective+ / G1000 NXi software, factory mandate compliance, low airframe hours. Highest acquisition cost but lowest scheduled maintenance investment near-term.
The Cessna T182T is the turbocharged Skylane — for owners who routinely fly high, hot, or over terrain and want the 182's load-hauling utility without losing power as they climb. A turbocharged Lycoming six-cylinder holds a 235-hp-class output and a roughly 150-knot cruise into the high teens, where a naturally-aspirated 182 is already running out of breath. The buy decision is whether your mission truly uses that altitude capability — because the turbo system is also this variant's defining cost and maintenance driver.
7 used Cessna T182T aircraft for sale 2020s · 4-seat · Reference price ~$375,000 ($300,000–$470,000) · updated 13 hours ago
Cessna T182T Specifications
Model specThe Cessna T182T is a 4-seat single engine piston with a cruise speed of 140–156 kt (259–289 km/h), a range of 640–915 nm (1,185–1,695 km), and a useful load of 1,050–1,110 lbs (476–503 kg).
Cessna T182T for Sale
Cessna T182T asking prices range from $734,500 to $875,000, with a median of $774,500 (market reference $375,000).
Cessna T182T Variants
| Variant | Years | Seats | Cruise | Range | Useful load | Price range | Best for | Listings for sale |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 182 | 1956–now | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 640 nm (1,185 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | — | Choose the fixed-gear 182 for the simplest, most affordable and best-supported Skylane — the definitive four-seat travelling single. Choose the R182 Skylane RG for retractable-gear speed at the cost of added gear maintenance. Choose the T182 / TR182 if you regularly fly high or out of high-elevation airports and need turbocharged performance. | 2 |
| 182D | 1962–1963 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $99K – $269K | An early-1960s carburetted Skylane — a capable, affordable four-seat high-wing tourer at the value end of the 182 range. | 6 |
| 182E | 1962–1962 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $40K – $295K | An early-1960s carburetted Skylane — a capable, affordable four-seat high-wing tourer at the value end of the 182 range. | 6 |
| 182K | 1966–1967 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $23K – $269K | A 1960s carburetted Skylane — a capable, well-supported four-seat high-wing tourer at the affordable end of the 182 range. | 12 |
| 182M | 1969–1971 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | — | A late-1960s carburetted Skylane — a capable, affordable four-seat high-wing tourer at the value end of the 182 range. | 1 |
| 182P | 1972–1976 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $169K – $249K | Buy the 182P if you want a classic, carbureted 1970s Skylane at the lowest entry into 230-hp four-seat utility. Consider a fuel-injected 182S or 182T instead if you want glass avionics, easier hot-starts and a lower-age airframe — and will pay modern-Skylane money. | 5 |
| FR182 | 1978–1988 | 4 | 145 kts (269 km/h) | 850 nm (1,574 km) | 1,100 lbs (499 kg) | — | Choose the FR182 Reims Skylane RG for retractable-gear Skylane speed, accepting European-origin parts and documentation. | 1 |
| R182 | 1978–1986 | 4 | 156 kts (289 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $111K – $244K | The retractable-gear Skylane — a faster four-seat high-wing tourer for a buyer who wants more cruise speed than the fixed-gear 182. | 24 |
| T182 | 1978–2004 | 4 | 152 kts (282 km/h) | 885 nm (1,639 km) | 1,050 lbs (476 kg) | $147K – $530K | A turbocharged Skylane — a four-seat high-wing tourer with high-altitude performance for a buyer who wants turbo capability. | 13 |
| 182Q | 1978–1982 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | — | A late-1970s carburetted Skylane — a popular, well-supported four-seat high-wing tourer at the more affordable end of the 182 range. | 3 |
| TR182 | 1979–1986 | 4 | 155 kts (287 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | $125K – $259K | The retractable-gear turbo Skylane — a fast, high-altitude four-seat high-wing single for capable cross-country travel. | 20 |
| 182R | 1982–1986 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,110 lbs (503 kg) | — | An early-1980s carburetted Skylane — a capable four-seat high-wing tourer and one of the last of the original 182 production run. | 1 |
| 182S | 1997–2000 | 4 | 140 kts (259 km/h) | 915 nm (1,695 km) | 1,100 lbs (499 kg) | — | Choose the 182S for a modern, fuel-injected restart Skylane at lower acquisition cost than the newer 182T. | 2 |
| 182T | 2001–now | 4 | 145 kts (269 km/h) | 885 nm (1,639 km) | 1,050 lbs (476 kg) | $126K – $469K | The newest, glass-panel Skylane — for a buyer who wants a current-production four-seat high-wing tourer rather than a vintage letter-series 182. | 5 |
Compare Cessna T182T
Detailed comparisons for the Cessna T182T are being prepared.
Browse all Cessna models →Cessna T182T Price & Cost
How much does a Cessna T182T cost? Used T182T prices: $734K – $875K, average $789K (median $774K); market reference $375K, across 4 priced of 7 active listings.
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.
The defining cost on a T182T is the turbonormalizing system, not the airframe — wastegate, intercooler and exhaust run a hotter duty cycle and the turbocharged Lycoming carries less TBO margin than the naturally-aspirated 182. Budget top-end and exhaust work, and weigh whether your mission truly needs the high-altitude capability you are paying to maintain.
Cessna T182T 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.
Lowest around $299,900 (1998 models) · highest around $807,500 (2025). Bars scaled across the range to show the depreciation curve; hover for exact medians.
Buying a Used Cessna T182T
Buying a Cessna T182T comes down to a focused pre-purchase checklist — here is what matters most on this model:
What to check before buying
Frequently Asked Questions — Cessna T182T
About the Cessna T182T
T182T vs 182T — what's the real difference?
What to inspect on a used Cessna T182T?
How much does it cost to operate the T182T?
Is the T182T still in production?
Cessna T182T Inventory by Country
| United States | 36 |
Cessna T182T Inventory by State
| Texas | 92 |
| California | 46 |
| Florida | 23 |
| Kentucky | 18 |
| South Carolina | 18 |
| Idaho | 16 |
| Washington | 15 |
| Oregon | 12 |
| Oklahoma | 12 |
| Arizona | 12 |
| Arkansas | 11 |
| Kansas | 11 |
Cessna T182T by Price
| Under $100k | 22 |
| Under $200k | 212 |
| Under $300k | 322 |
| Under $500k | 429 |
Recently Sold Cessna T182T
| 2002 T182T | $330,000 |
Other Cessna Aircraft
| Cessna Citation III / VII | 26 |
| Cessna Citation II | 21 |
| Cessna Citation I | 12 |
| Cessna Caravan | 8 |
Cessna T182T Safety Record
Across all T182T variants, 41 NTSB-recorded events are on file from 2002–2025. As with any aircraft, most outcomes depend on pilot training, maintenance and operating conditions rather than the airframe itself.
41
Total Events
26
Incidents
1
Serious
9
Fatal
Most Recent Events
| Date | Location | Severity | Probable Cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 04, 2025 | Venice, FL | Incident | The pilot’s failure to maintain directional control while taxiing in gusty, quartering tailwind conditions. |
| Aug 07, 2025 | Augusta, AR | Fatal (1) | — |
| Mar 12, 2024 | Lapeer, MI | Minor | The pilot’s failure to maintain aircraft control while landing in a gusting crosswind condition. |
| May 14, 2023 | Albany, WY | Fatal (2) | The pilot’s decision to conduct flight into an area of icing in an airplane that was prohibited from such conditions, wh… |
| Mar 07, 2023 | Queets, WA | Fatal (1) | The pilot’s failure to maintain clearance from terrain for undetermined reasons. |
NTSB records 2002–2025. Includes all Cessna T182T variants. Events ≠ aircraft fault.