Book a Private Jet with Crypto: Miami to New York
Published
Paying for a charter in cryptocurrency is, at this point, unremarkable — and that is the appeal. The flight itself is identical: the same vetted aircraft, the same two-pilot crews, the same 2-hour-30-minute run from Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport (OPF) up to Teterboro Airport (TEB). The only thing that changes is the last step, where an established payment processor accepts your crypto and settles the invoice in dollars.
Here is the commercial shape of it. Your quote is issued in US dollars — say a light jet from about $15,000 one-way — and when you accept, the processor generates a payment request at its current conversion rate. Once the transfer confirms, the dollar amount is locked, the operator is paid conventionally, and the booking stands on exactly the same contractual footing as a wire or card payment.
Estimated pricing for planning — your account manager confirms the final quote.

Private charters on the Miami–New York corridor depart from Miami-Opa Locka Executive Airport (OPF), Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport (FXE), Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL) or Miami International Airport (MIA), and arrive at Teterboro Airport (TEB), Westchester County Airport (HPN), Republic Airport (FRG) or Long Island MacArthur Airport (ISP).
How settlement actually works
The mechanics are deliberately boring. We quote the flight in dollars, you approve it, and the payment processor issues a request specifying the exact crypto amount at that moment's rate — typically valid for a short, stated window. You send from any wallet you control; the processor converts to USD on receipt and confirms settlement to us, usually within the hour. From that confirmation the charter is funded, the aircraft is committed, and volatility is no longer your problem or ours — the dollars are already dollars.
Timing is the one genuinely new consideration. Because the crypto amount is fixed against the dollar quote only when the payment request is generated, the practical advice is simple: be ready to pay when you accept the quote, and the figure you see is the figure that settles. Established processors run standard compliance checks on larger transfers, exactly as a bank would, so allow a little margin on first use. After the first booking, repeat payments tend to clear noticeably faster.
The corridor suits crypto payment unusually well. Miami books late and flies at odd hours, and crypto rails run around the clock — a transfer confirms on a Saturday night exactly as it does on a Tuesday morning, while bank wires wait for business days. That makes weekend and short-notice departures easier to fund, including time-sensitive empty legs that would not survive a two-day settlement wait. For scheduled trips there is no such urgency; the method simply works the same.
- Quotes issued and locked in US dollars — crypto converts at payment
- Settlement through established processors, typically confirmed within the hour
- Same FAA Part 135 operators and aircraft as any other booking
- Payments clear on weekends and holidays, when bank wires cannot
What does not change
Everything that matters about the flight is untouched by how you pay. Aircraft come from the same pool of FAA Part 135 operators; crews, insurance and maintenance standards are identical; the contract you sign is the standard charter agreement with the payment clause adjusted. A Falcon 7X booked with crypto is the same Falcon 7X at the same estimated price — on this route, heavy jets run from about $35,000 one-way — with the same catering and the same car on the ramp.
What to do next is equally plain. Ask for a quote as you normally would — dates, headcount, preferred cabin — and mention crypto when we discuss payment. We confirm which currencies the processor currently supports, walk through the timing once, and send the payment request when you are ready to commit. No investment conversation, no speculation — just a clean way to pay for a well-run flight.
Book a Private Jet with Crypto gallery

Frequently asked questions
Which cryptocurrencies are accepted for charter payment?
The established processors we work with support the widely held cryptocurrencies and major dollar-pegged stablecoins; the exact list shifts as processors update their coverage, so we confirm it against your preferred currency at quote time. If you hold something less common, ask — conversion routes exist for most liquid assets.
Is the charter priced in crypto or in dollars?
Always in dollars. A Miami–New York light jet quoted at $15,000 stays a $15,000 flight; the processor simply calculates the crypto equivalent at the moment it issues your payment request. Once your transfer confirms, settlement is complete in USD and later market movement has no effect on the booking either way.
How quickly does a crypto payment confirm the flight?
Typically within the hour — network confirmation plus the processor's checks — and often much faster for stablecoin transfers. The booking is firm the moment settlement is confirmed to us, the same trigger as a cleared wire. For same-day departures we can usually run payment and flight preparation in parallel.
Does paying with crypto change the aircraft or the safety standard?
No. The aircraft, FAA Part 135 operator vetting, crew requirements and insurance are identical whatever the payment rail. Crypto changes how funds reach the operator — through a processor that converts to dollars — and nothing else. You should expect the same tails and the same estimated pricing offered to any other client.
Can I book a weekend or same-day flight and pay in crypto?
Yes — this is where crypto genuinely helps. Transfers confirm around the clock, weekends and holidays included, while bank wires wait for the next business day. When an aircraft is available, a Saturday-evening enquiry can settle and fly the same night. Aircraft availability, not the payment, is the limiting factor.
Ready to fly Miami to New York?
Send your dates and party size for estimated pricing across suitable aircraft — typically within two hours, with no obligation.



