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
Entry Into Service & Transition Management
From delivery to first flight, ACASS manages every regulatory, crew, and operational workstream — so ownership begins without friction. Own Your Journey® starts here.
Connect With a Specialist- Pre-Acquisition Support: Inspection oversight, technical records review, and airworthiness verification
- Registration and Certification: Aircraft registration, import documentation, and AOC placement
- Crew Recruitment: In-house staffing and type-rating coordination aligned to delivery
- Operational Infrastructure: Hangar selection, maintenance enrollment, and systems setup

Entry Into Service
Entry into service is the coordinated process of bringing a newly acquired aircraft from delivery to full operational readiness — the highest-risk phase of ownership. Compressed timelines, parallel workstreams, and regulatory dependencies can delay first flight. ACASS has executed this process across India, the Middle East, Russia, Africa, China, Southeast Asia, and the Americas, with a global track record built across 56 countries and three decades of continuous operations.

ACASS EIS Process
ACASS engages 60 to 90 days before delivery. A dedicated EIS project manager coordinates every workstream — a single point of accountability from pre-acquisition through first flight.
Crew Coordination Advantage
Entry into service demands crew recruitment, type-rating scheduling, and licence validation resolved before the delivery deadline — not after. ACASS manages flight crew staffing in-house, eliminating the timeline risk that third-party recruitment introduces at the most time-sensitive phase of ownership. From candidate identification to first flight authorization, crew readiness is coordinated within the same integrated EIS workstream.
Switching Aircraft Management Companies
Why Owners Make the Change
Dissatisfaction with a management provider rarely arrives without warning. The patterns are consistent: eroding transparency, communication that leaves owners uninformed, or an operator whose capabilities no longer match the scale and complexity of your operation. Recognizing those signals early is the first step toward a management relationship that genuinely serves your aircraft and your interests.
The ACASS Transition Process
ACASS manages every stage of the changeover — notice period coordination, operational assessment, crew evaluation, vendor migration, AOC transfer, and account setup — under a single, integrated oversight structure. The process is designed to eliminate ambiguity at every handover point, ensuring your aircraft remains fully available throughout. No operational gaps. No administrative delays passed on to you.
Zero-Downtime Aircraft Availability
Continuity of availability is the standard ACASS holds itself to from the first day of transition. Maintenance records, crew files, and all operational documentation transfer under full ACASS oversight, within a structured timeline and with no disruption to your flight schedule. The changeover is your management company's problem to manage — not yours.

Evaluating Management Companies
Choosing an aircraft management company at the acquisition stage requires an EIS-specific framework. Key questions: Does the company hold its own AOC? What is its documented EIS track record across jurisdictions? Does it have in-house crew staffing? Can it produce a detailed project plan before contract signing? ACASS answers each with IS-BAO Stage 3 certification awarded in 2017 and ARGUS Gold held since 2013.

Global EIS Experience
Most business aviation management companies are built for a single jurisdiction. ACASS has executed entry into service across India, the Middle East, Russia, Africa, China, Southeast Asia, North America, and South America — each with distinct registration requirements, crew licensing standards, and customs processes. ACASS coordinates ferry and delivery flights, overflight permits, and international routing as part of the same integrated workstream.

Beyond First Flight
Entry into service is not a project with an end date — it is the foundation of the management relationship. When EIS concludes, the ACASS project manager formally briefs the dedicated aircraft manager, transferring owner preferences, aircraft specifics, crew profiles, and vendor relationships. Maintenance programs and crew schedules carry forward without interruption. At 90 days, ACASS conducts a post-EIS operational audit to identify optimization opportunities.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Entry into service is the structured process of transitioning a newly acquired aircraft from delivery to full operational readiness. It encompasses every workstream required before the aircraft can fly commercially or privately under its new ownership — registration with the relevant national authority, crew recruitment and type-rating, maintenance program enrollment, insurance activation, hangar arrangement, and operational infrastructure setup. For pre-owned acquisitions, the process begins earlier, with pre-purchase inspection oversight and technical records review. ACASS manages the entire EIS process through a dedicated project manager, ensuring every parallel workstream resolves before the delivery deadline.
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EIS timelines vary based on aircraft type, acquisition origin, and the jurisdictions involved. For domestic acquisitions of pre-owned aircraft, the process typically spans 60 to 90 days from engagement to first flight. Factory-new deliveries may involve longer lead times due to completion monitoring and acceptance inspection requirements. International acquisitions — particularly those involving import documentation, foreign crew licensing validation, and multi-jurisdiction regulatory filings — require additional planning horizons. ACASS engages at the earliest possible stage to build a realistic project plan with confirmed milestones, ensuring that regulatory dependencies do not compress the timeline unnecessarily close to the delivery date.
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Aircraft management transition is the structured process of moving an aircraft from one management company to another without disrupting flight operations. ACASS executes the changeover in a defined sequence: notice period coordination with the outgoing provider, an ACASS operational assessment, crew evaluation and retention decisions, vendor and contract migration, AOC transfer, and account setup. Maintenance records, crew files, and operational documentation are transferred under full ACASS oversight. The process is designed to protect aircraft availability throughout — owners continue flying while the administrative and regulatory changeover is completed behind the scenes. A typical transition completes within 30 to 60 days.
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The most important distinction is whether the company holds its own Air Operator Certificate or operates under a third-party certificate. AOC ownership directly affects the owner’s regulatory exposure and operational accountability. Beyond certification, evaluate the company’s documented EIS track record — how many aircraft it has brought into service and across which jurisdictions. In-house crew staffing capability is a meaningful differentiator, as outsourced recruitment introduces timeline risk at the most time-sensitive phase. ACASS holds IS-BAO Stage 3, ARGUS Gold, and IADA Accredited Dealer status, and operates its own AOCs in Canada, Ireland, and San Marino.
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Yes. ACASS has executed entry into service across India, the Middle East, Russia, Africa, China, Southeast Asia, North America, and South America — each jurisdiction carrying distinct registration requirements, crew licensing standards, overflight permit processes, and customs procedures. International EIS requires institutional knowledge that generalist operators rarely hold. ACASS coordinates ferry and delivery flights, foreign crew license validations, import documentation, and AOC placement as part of a single integrated workstream. Owners acquiring aircraft across borders benefit from a management partner with direct regulatory experience in the destination jurisdiction, eliminating the delays that arise from navigating unfamiliar authorities for the first time.
ACASS — Own Your Journey®