Podcast: The Truth About the Market
Host: Jason Zilberbrand, President of VREF

General aviation buyers love to compare airplanes.

Vision Jet versus Epic.
Jet versus turboprop.
Speed versus payload.
Range versus cost.

But that’s only part of the decision.

In this episode of The Truth About the Market, Jason breaks down why the aircraft itself is often not where the real risk begins. The risk starts earlier, in the assumptions, the transaction structure, the people advising you, and the support network waiting after closing.

Because buying an aircraft is not just a purchase.

It is a process.

And if that process is weak, the airplane almost doesn’t matter.

Jason frames the episode around three connected questions:

What are you actually buying?

How do you acquire it without losing control?

And who do you call when ownership gets real?

In this episode, we cover:

  • Why the Cirrus Vision Jet and Epic E1000 are not really competing for the same buyer, even when people compare them that way
  • Why the Vision Jet behaves more like a structured ownership platform than a traditional aircraft purchase
  • How training, support, automation, safety architecture, and resale audience shape Vision Jet liquidity
  • Why the Epic delivers more raw capability, but requires a more experienced and disciplined owner
  • How performance can compress decision-making and increase operational expectations
  • Why the right aircraft is not the one with the best spec sheet, but the one that fits your mission, skill, support network, and exit strategy
  • Why Vision Jet buyers are often buying infrastructure, while Epic buyers are buying capability
  • How market behavior changes when conditions tighten, and why broader buyer pools matter more than most owners realize
  • Why most aircraft transactions fail because of poor structure, not poor valuation
  • How the letter of intent controls the deal long before the pre-buy begins
  • Why a poorly written LOI can surrender leverage before anyone touches the aircraft
  • Why the pre-buy should identify risk, not turn into an uncontrolled repair project
  • The difference between discovery and correction, and why disciplined buyers separate the two
  • Why documentation often matters more than cosmetics
  • How missing logs, inconsistent records, and uncertain maintenance history can impair financing, insurance, and resale
  • Why capital is conditional, not assumed
  • How lenders underwrite more than the borrower, including the aircraft, the market, and the exit strategy
  • Why the visible listing price is not the real market
  • Why buyers who ignore headline pricing and focus on transaction behavior gain leverage
  • Why building a real aviation Rolodex may matter more after closing than before it
  • How geography, service density, parts access, and maintenance support affect ownership risk
  • Why a good support network should include primary and backup maintenance providers, AOG resources, parts contacts, insurance brokers, lenders, advisors, and tax professionals
  • How owner groups and type communities can help, but should never replace core advisors

Jason also explains why ownership does not end at closing. That is when the real discipline begins.

The transaction gets you the airplane.

The network keeps it operating.

The bottom line:

The aircraft matters.

But the process matters more.

The right aircraft with the wrong structure, weak documentation, poor financing preparation, or no ownership support network can become expensive fast.

General aviation rewards preparation.

It punishes assumptions.

And the difference between confidence and regret is rarely the airplane alone.

It is the approach.

For accurate, defensible aircraft valuations trusted by lenders, insurers, and professionals worldwide, sign up for VREF Online today.

Fly safe. Stay smart.