Fixed-Base Operator
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://airlinefyi.com/iframe/glossary/fbo/" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/fbo/
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/fbo/)
Use the native HTML custom element.
Definition
Private aviation service provider at airports offering fuel, hangars, maintenance, and passenger services for general aviation
The major commercial terminals most travelers experience represent only part of the airport ecosystem. Adjacent to the main passenger terminals at thousands of airports worldwide, and often operating from their own dedicated facilities, are Fixed-Base Operators — FBOs. For the private aviation world, the FBO is what the terminal is for commercial passengers: a gateway to the air, but configured for a very different kind of traveler.
What Is a Fixed-Base Operator?
A Fixed-Base Operator (FBO) is a private company authorized by an airport to provide aeronautical services to general aviation — the broad category encompassing private jets, charter aircraft, turboprops, piston aircraft, and other non-commercial aviation. FBOs offer fuel, aircraft parking (ramp and hangar), maintenance, pilot briefing services, flight planning facilities, lavatory and galley servicing, and terminal facilities for arriving and departing passengers. At airports that serve both commercial airlines and general aviation, the FBO operates from a separate facility, often providing a markedly more private and expedited experience than the main commercial terminal.
How It Works in Practice
When a private aircraft arrives at an FBO, the sequence is entirely different from a commercial arrival. The aircraft taxis directly to the FBO ramp, where marshalling staff guide it into a parking position. Passengers disembark from the aircraft and walk directly into the FBO terminal — a private lounge, often with customs facilities for international arrivals, restrooms, conference rooms, and a concierge who arranges ground transportation. There is no security queue, no baggage carousel, and frequently no wait. The entire process from landing to departing the FBO in a car can take ten minutes.
FBOs earn revenue primarily through fuel sales, marked up over their wholesale cost, and through ramp fees, handling fees, and tie-down or hangar rental. Fuel pricing is a competitive variable; at busy airports like Teterboro (which serves as the primary general aviation airport for the New York metropolitan area) or Van Nuys Airport (which serves Los Angeles), multiple FBOs compete aggressively on fuel price, service quality, and facility amenities. The largest FBO networks — Signature Aviation, Jet Aviation, and TAG Aviation — operate dozens of locations globally, providing a consistent level of service for corporate flight departments and charter operators.
At airports like London Luton, which serves both commercial carriers and significant private aviation traffic, FBOs such as Harrods Aviation and Inflite operate premium private terminals that handle thousands of high-net-worth departures annually. Dubai and Geneva are among the most active FBO locations in Europe and the Middle East, reflecting the concentration of high-net-worth individuals and corporate flight departments in those regions.
Why It Matters
FBOs represent the infrastructure of private aviation, making general aviation practically feasible at airports of all sizes. For corporate aviation, the ability to depart from a private FBO at a major metropolitan airport — avoiding the commercial terminal entirely — is a central part of the value proposition of business aviation. FBOs also provide essential services at smaller airports where commercial handling is unavailable, supporting everything from charter operations to medevac flights to cargo redistribution. For airports, FBO revenue from fuel, ramp fees, and hangar rental provides an important supplemental income stream that does not require the infrastructure investment of commercial terminal expansion.
Key Facts and Figures
- Signature Aviation is the world's largest FBO network, operating over 200 locations across North America, Europe, and beyond following its acquisition of multiple competing networks
- Teterboro Airport (TEB) in New Jersey, the primary business aviation gateway to New York City, handles over 100,000 annual aircraft operations, almost entirely general aviation, through its FBO operators
- FBO fuel margins in the United States typically range from 50 cents to over 2 US dollars per gallon over wholesale cost, making fuel sales the primary revenue driver
- The global business aviation market, which FBOs serve, was valued at approximately 32 billion US dollars in 2023 and is projected to grow at around 5 percent annually
- Dubai's Jetex FBO at Dubai International is one of the most active private aviation facilities in the world, handling thousands of private jet movements annually given Dubai's role as a hub for high-net-worth travel
Related Concepts
- General Aviation
- Charter Aviation
- Ramp Handling
- Hangar Services
- Business Aviation Infrastructure
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Fixed-Base Operator (FBO)?
What does FBO stand for?
Why is Fixed-Base Operator (FBO) important in aviation?
Airport Operations
- Airport Slot
- Gate
- Terminal
- Apron / Ramp
- Turnaround Time
- Ground Handling
- Jet Bridge
- Runway (RWY)
- CBP Preclearance
- Minimum Connecting Time (MCT)
- Airport Curfew
- Airport Capacity
- Slot Coordination
- Noise Abatement
- Airport of Entry (AOE)
- IATA Airport Code
- Aircraft Deicing
- Pushback
- Ramp Agent
- Airport Privatization
- Common-Use Terminal Equipment (CUTE)
Explore on Sister Sites
-
Airport Glossary ↗
Aviation terms for airports, routes, and air traffic control
-
Aircraft Glossary ↗
150 aircraft and aviation technology terms