Piper Seminole Aircraft (PA-44)
About the Piper Seminole
The Piper Seminole (PA-44) is a four-seat twin trainer with counter-rotating Lycoming O-360 engines — Piper's purpose-built multi-engine training aircraft, used by flight schools worldwide. It cruises around 160 knots, is forgiving on engine-out work thanks to the counter-rotating props, and has the largest used multi-engine-trainer market.
5 used Piper Seminole aircraft for sale · 4-seat · Reference price ~$375,000 ($250,000–$550,000) · updated 7 hours ago
Piper Seminole Specifications
Model specThe Piper Seminole is a 4-seat multi engine piston with a cruise speed of 162 kt (300 km/h), a range of 915 nm (1,695 km), and a useful load of 1,370 lbs (621 kg).
5 Piper Seminole For Sale
There are currently 5 used Piper Seminole for sale, ranging from $151,800 to $375,000, with a median asking price of $185,603 (market reference $375,000).
Compare Piper Seminole
Detailed comparisons for the Piper Seminole are being prepared.
Browse all Piper models →Piper Seminole Price & Cost
How much does a Piper Seminole cost? Used Seminole prices: $151K – $375K, average $224K (median $185K); market reference $375K, across 4 priced of 5 active listings.
Based on 4 priced 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.
Buying a Used Piper Seminole
Buying a Piper Seminole comes down to a focused pre-purchase checklist — here is what matters most on this model:
What to check before buying
Frequently Asked Questions — Piper Seminole
How much does a used Piper Seminole cost?
Why do flight schools like the Seminole?
How fast is a Piper Seminole?
How many seats does a Seminole have?
Piper Seminole Inventory by Country
| Denmark | 1 |
Piper Seminole by Price
| Under $200k | 1 |
| Under $300k | 1 |
| Under $500k | 1 |
Piper Seminole Safety Record
No NTSB events on record for the Piper Seminole. Individual aircraft safety records may be available on detail pages.
Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database