Our
Locations
World HQ

6700 Côte de Liesse, suite 206,
+1 514 636-1099
Montréal, Canada,
H4T 2B5Ireland

Suite 3230, Building 3000, Westpark Business Campus, Shannon, Clare, V14 AN29
+353 61 475 802San Marino

World Trade Center, Via Consiglio dei Sessanta,
+39 0549 942-551
99, 47891 Dogana, San Marino
Aircraft Pre-Buy Inspection
An aircraft pre-buy inspection is the single most consequential step between a signed Letter of Intent and a completed business jet acquisition. The buyer has identified a candidate aircraft, the parties have agreed in principle, and the aircraft pre-buy inspection now determines whether the transaction closes on sound terms or surfaces costly surprises. What follows draws on 30+ years of ACASS transaction experience.

Aircraft Pre-Buy Inspection Meaning
An aircraft pre-buy inspection, also called a pre-purchase inspection or PPI, is a comprehensive technical evaluation of an aircraft’s condition, maintenance history, and regulatory compliance status conducted at the buyer’s request before purchase. It is not an annual inspection and produces no logbook entries. It is a conditional evaluation whose scope is agreed between buyer and seller before the inspection begins, typically conducted by an independent MRO. Its purpose is to give the buyer an accurate, independent picture of what they are acquiring before funds change hands.

What the Inspection Covers
A comprehensive aircraft pre-purchase inspection covers airframe and structure, including corrosion assessment, damage history, and prior repairs; engines, including borescope inspection and engine program enrollment status; avionics systems; landing gear; fuel systems; and flight controls. Logbooks and maintenance records are reviewed for completeness, accuracy, and compliance with applicable airworthiness directives and service bulletins. The depth of inspection varies by aircraft age, type, and agreed scope, but a thorough records review alongside the physical examination is non-negotiable.

Why Independence Matters in an Inspection
The inspection facility must be selected by the buyer, not by the seller or the seller’s representative. A maintenance organization that currently services the aircraft for the seller has an inherent interest in presenting the aircraft favorably, and their findings may not reflect what a genuinely independent evaluator would discover. The buyer has the right to select an MRO with documented experience on the specific make and model. Independence is the foundation of the inspection’s entire value.

Where Pre-Buy Fits in Acquisitions
The aircraft pre-buy inspection sits between the signed Letter of Intent and the execution of a formal purchase agreement, after both parties have agreed in principle but before any funds are committed to escrow. The inspection scope should be documented as an exhibit to the purchase agreement before work begins. This sequencing protects both parties: the buyer retains the right to renegotiate or withdraw based on findings, and the seller maintains a clear record of what was agreed.

Airworthy vs. Non-Airworthy Findings
Not every discrepancy found during an aircraft pre-purchase inspection carries equal weight. The critical distinction is between airworthiness-limiting items and non-airworthy maintenance findings. Airworthiness-limiting discrepancies must be corrected before the aircraft can legally operate and are typically the seller’s responsibility under a standard purchase agreement. Non-airworthy items, such as cosmetic issues or deferred maintenance, become negotiating points. The buyer and seller agree on who addresses each item and on what terms before closing continues.

Agreeing the Inspection Scope
The inspection scope must be defined and agreed in writing before any work begins. Scope definition covers which systems will be examined, the depth of records review, and whether any additional specialist assessments are required. A well-constructed scope protects the buyer from gaps in coverage and gives both parties a clear reference if disputes arise from findings. Buyers working with an experienced aircraft acquisition advisor are better positioned to define a scope that reflects the aircraft’s specific risk profile rather than a generic checklist.

How to Handle Inspection Findings
When the inspection report is delivered, the buyer should review the full findings before deciding what to share with the seller and when. This timing should be agreed in the purchase agreement before the inspection begins. Airworthiness discrepancies typically trigger seller-funded rectification; cosmetic and non-essential items are negotiated individually. Distinguishing between deal-breakers, price-adjustment triggers, and acceptable conditions of purchase requires direct transaction experience. Most business jet acquisitions close after some form of agreed rectification, not a clean report.

How Long the Inspection Takes
The physical inspection of a business jet typically requires ten to fifteen business days of ground time at the inspection facility, excluding subsequent rectification work. Complex aircraft, older airframes, or broader buyer-requested scopes can extend this timeline considerably. Buyers must also account for the time required after findings are delivered to negotiate, rectify discrepancies, and complete closing. Planning the full inspection and closing sequence as a single integrated timeline is essential to managing a transaction professionally.

How ACASS Supports Pre-Buy Inspection
ACASS leads aircraft pre-buy inspections as an integrated step within its full acquisition advisory service. The ACASS technical consultancy team brings in-house expertise to scope definition, findings review, and contractual resolution. As an IADA Accredited Dealer since 2019 with IS-BAO Stage 3 certification and ARGUS Gold standing, ACASS brings verified credentials to every inspection engagement. With $2B+ in completed transactions across 30+ years, the pre-buy inspection is a protected, managed step within a full aircraft acquisition process.

Choosing the Right Inspection Facility
The inspection facility should have documented experience with the specific make and model of aircraft being purchased. A general MRO with no background on that aircraft type is structurally less reliable than a recognized specialist for that platform. The facility must be fully independent of the seller, the seller’s representative, and the aircraft’s current maintenance provider. The buyer or their advisor should review the facility’s scope proposal in writing before work begins.

What the Inspection Cannot Tell You
An aircraft pre-purchase inspection is a snapshot of the aircraft’s condition at a single point in time. It cannot predict future maintenance requirements with certainty or guarantee operational reliability after purchase. Records gaps, prior repair histories, and maintenance program transitions all carry residual uncertainty that requires advisory interpretation, not just a reading of inspection findings. Experienced buyers treat the inspection report as critical input to a decision, not a definitive verdict.

Inspection and Entry Into Service
The findings from an aircraft pre-buy inspection directly inform the post-closing ownership phase. Items requiring rectification before the aircraft enters operation must be confirmed resolved before it is put into service. For buyers bringing aircraft into new jurisdictions, additional regulatory requirements may arise that affect registration and airworthiness certification timelines. An advisor who managed the inspection and knows the aircraft’s technical history is far better positioned to coordinate Entry Into Service after closing than a new party introduced after the transaction completes.

Protect Every Stage of Your Acquisition
An aircraft pre-buy inspection is the buyer’s primary protection in any business jet transaction. Independence, scope, timing, and advisory context determine whether it protects the buyer or simply adds downtime to the process. ACASS guides buyers through every stage: technical coordination, findings interpretation, contractual negotiation, and Entry Into Service. Connect With a Specialist to discuss your next aircraft acquisition with an advisory team carrying 30+ years of experience, $2B+ in transactions, and IADA Accredited Dealer credentials. ACASS — Own Your Journey®
Frequently Asked Questions
-
An aircraft pre-buy inspection, also called a pre-purchase inspection or PPI, is a comprehensive technical evaluation of an aircraft’s airworthiness, maintenance history, and regulatory compliance conducted by an independent inspector at the buyer’s request before purchase is finalized. It covers the airframe, engines, avionics, logbooks, and airworthiness directive compliance, and produces no logbook entries. Its purpose is to give the buyer an independent, accurate assessment of the aircraft’s condition before funds are committed.
-
For a business jet, the physical inspection typically requires ten to fifteen business days of ground time at the inspection facility, excluding rectification work that follows the report. The total timeline from inspection start to closing is longer, encompassing findings review, negotiation on discrepancies, and agreed rectification before funds are released from escrow. Complex aircraft, older airframes, and broader scopes extend both phases. Buyers should plan for the full sequence when structuring a transaction timeline.
-
The buyer pays for the pre-buy inspection in virtually all business aircraft transactions, regardless of whether the purchase ultimately proceeds. This reflects the fact that the inspection is conducted for the buyer’s benefit and protection. The seller is typically responsible for rectifying findings that constitute airworthiness-limiting discrepancies, items that must be corrected before the aircraft can legally operate. Non-airworthy findings are negotiated between the parties and resolved as a condition of closing.
-
Finding discrepancies during a pre-buy inspection is entirely normal. The expectation is not a clean report but a managed outcome. When findings are delivered, airworthiness-limiting items are typically the seller’s responsibility; other items are negotiated individually. The buyer can request rectification before closing, accept a price adjustment, or, in cases of serious undisclosed issues, withdraw within the terms agreed in the purchase agreement. Advisory guidance at this stage is essential.
-
Independence is non-negotiable. The inspection must be conducted by a facility with no connection to the seller, the seller’s representative, or the aircraft’s current maintenance provider. ACASS leads pre-buy inspections as part of a full acquisition advisory engagement, helping buyers define scope, select appropriate independent facilities, interpret findings, and translate technical discoveries into contractual outcomes. ACASS’s in-house technical team ensures the buyer’s interests are protected from scope definition through to post-inspection negotiation and closing.
-
IADA, the International Aircraft Dealers Association, sets professional standards for ethics, transaction conduct, and market integrity in business aircraft sales. An IADA Accredited Dealer brings accountability to the inspection and acquisition process that unaccredited intermediaries are not required to demonstrate. For a buyer, this means the party guiding scope definition, findings interpretation, and negotiation is operating under documented professional standards, not simply market convention. ACASS has held IADA Accredited Dealer status since 2019.