Empty Leg Flights for Boston Marathon
30 flights available from $4715 — Boston, MA
Available flights for Boston Marathon
Boston Marathon
The Boston Marathon runs on Patriots Day, the third Monday of April, drawing 30,000 runners and an estimated 500,000 spectators along the 26.2-mile course from Hopkinton to Boylston Street. It is the world's oldest annual marathon and one of the six World Marathon Majors.
Private aviation for the Boston Marathon concentrates in two distinct segments. The first is the serious corporate and charitable running community. Many participants run as charity fundraisers through race sponsors -- hospitals, financial firms, and nonprofits pay for guaranteed bibs and fly their runners and donor guests to Boston for the weekend. Those groups arrive Sunday and depart Monday evening or Tuesday, producing return repositioning legs.
The second is the spectator and hospitality circuit. Marathon Monday is a public holiday in Massachusetts, and the course runs through some of Boston's wealthiest neighborhoods -- Brookline, Newton, Back Bay. Companies and individuals with connections to Boston or to the running world entertain guests at viewing positions along the course. The Wellesley Scream Tunnel and Heartbreak Hill sections in Newton are particularly popular spectator destinations for corporate hospitality groups.
April is reliably one of the stronger private aviation months for Boston. The biotech and financial conference season is winding up, the academic calendar has spring events at Harvard and MIT, and the marathon adds a pure leisure and hospitality layer on top of the existing corporate baseline.
Where to land for Boston Marathon
Hanscom Field (KBED) in Bedford is the primary private aviation airport for Boston, 18 miles northwest of downtown and about 20 miles from the Hopkinton start line via Route 495. Signature Flight Support and Rectrix both operate FBOs there. Hanscom handles aircraft up to heavy-cabin size with no curfew restrictions. The drive to the Back Bay Boylston Street finish area takes 30-40 minutes in pre-marathon traffic; plan for longer on race day as road closures affect routes into the city.
Boston Logan International (KBOS) has FBOs for private aircraft but ground operations slow during Monday morning commercial traffic. Most private aviation operators use Hanscom for Boston arrivals. Logan makes sense when the itinerary involves a commercial connection.
Beverly Regional Airport (KBVY) on the North Shore is an option for lighter aircraft and passengers staying in the North Shore area or attending Harvard events in Cambridge. It's 30 miles north of downtown but sees minimal congestion during the marathon period.
Road closures on Marathon Monday are substantial. The course cuts across multiple major arteries, and routes from Hanscom toward the city are affected from mid-morning through late afternoon. Drivers should plan for Route 2 eastbound delays from 9 AM onward; the best viewing positions along Newton hills are easier to reach from the west side of the city before 8 AM than after.
When to book empty legs for Boston Marathon
The weekend before the marathon (Saturday and Sunday) is when most private aviation arrives. Sunday is the primary arrival day as runners collect their bibs at the Hynes Convention Center expo, attend pre-race dinners, and settle in. Empty legs toward Boston appear Saturday and Sunday from New York, Chicago, and the Southeast.
Monday departures cluster in the evening after the race concludes. The elite finish typically runs midday; recreational waves finish through mid-afternoon. Monday evening departures from Hanscom appear at below-market rates as operators reposition aircraft to New York, Florida, and the Midwest. Those legs are worth watching for same-day departures.
The weather variable is real. April in Boston can produce temperatures from 35 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit, wind, rain, or sunshine within the same week. Headwinds on the course affect runner finishing times dramatically. The same variability affects aircraft planning: northeast wind conditions on race day occasionally create instrument approaches at Hanscom that delay arrivals.
Tuesday departures are the quieter option. Overnight guests who stayed through the post-race celebrations fly out Tuesday morning at normal pricing and with full ramp availability.
What it costs to fly private to Boston Marathon
Current empty legs arriving near Boston, MA range from $5,300 to $19,800, with an average around $10,342. By aircraft size: super-midsize jets at $5,300-$19,800, midsize jets at $10,400.
Among the routes with current inventory: from Montréal, QC at $5,300; from Fort Lauderdale, FL at $19,800; from Chicago, IL at $10,400. These prices change as operators update their schedules, so the specific routes and rates shift from week to week.
Of the 32 active legs in our system heading toward this area, 4 have published prices. The rest require contacting the operator for a quote. Empty legs without a listed price are often negotiable, especially closer to the departure date.
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