
The standard isn't a badge.
Safety in private aviation is an ongoing process, not a plaque on the wall. We evaluate the aircraft, the operator, and the mission profile.
Four gates. Every mission.
Operational excellence and peace of mind
01
Operator vetting
Every operator in our network is reviewed for certificates, insurance, incident history, maintenance posture, and crew standards before we place members on their aircraft.
02
Per-mission review
Each flight is evaluated against the mission: runway length, weather, crew duty, aircraft fit, and backup options. We decline trips that do not clear the bar, even when that is inconvenient.
03
Mechanical disruption support
If an aircraft mechanical issue changes the plan, Charter Flight Support and the AIH operating ecosystem help the team evaluate recovery options quickly including the ability to deploy owned assets within the industry’s most modern fleet.
04
Post-flight follow-up
Your team reviews every mission after it lands. Anything irregular is logged, discussed, and brought into the next operator review.
The bar is simple. If an aircraft, an operator, or a mission profile doesn't clear our standard, members don't fly it. Convenience never wins that argument.
The StraightLine standard
When the aircraft changes.
Recovery should not begin with a blank page. Every StraightLine flight includes mechanical disruption support made possible by Charter Flight Support, giving the team operator context, market awareness, and recovery resources unrivaled in the industry.
Bring us the missions that matter.
Build the route brief first. Then an advisor can discuss operator diligence, aircraft fit, and recovery posture in the context of your actual flying.