Tuvoli completes record $100m in charter bookings in March

news
0
SHARE:

Digital business aviation platform Tuvoli said it facilitated $100m in charter bookings during March through its mobile-optimised digital infrastructure.

The company said the March bookings translate to one departure every 11 minutes – a record month for the company since its launch in 2019, edging closer to its goal of achieving $2bn charter transactions this year.

Tuvoli’s performance establishes a $1.2bn annualised run-rate and reflects accelerating adoption across both operators and brokers. The business has now surpassed $3bn in lifetime bookings, further reinforcing its position for providing core transaction infrastructure within private aviation.

“This success underscores the escalating trend towards digitalization in private aviation,” said Tuvoli CEO Greg Johnson. “Crossing $100m in a single month demonstrates that operators and brokers are not just trying Tuvoli – they’re relying on it to run real volume.”

Building on this booking momentum, Tuvoli says it is preparing to formally introduce business aviation’s first Global Distribution System (GDS). Formal launch is planned for the end of May.

“What makes this different is that the network is already active,” said Johnson. “We’re not launching an idea—we’re formalizing behavior that’s already happening at scale.”

In advance of the launch, Tuvoli is expanding its network by onboarding additional operators and brokers, further deepening liquidity across the platform.

Tuvoli, which translates from Italian to ‘You Fly’, enables operators to access aggregated broker demand without subscription fees or upfront commitments.

Charter brokers can use the platform to have a unified workflow for sourcing, quoting, contracting, through to safe and secure payment.

Tuvoli is committed to investing in automation and pricing capabilities, including the upcoming release of Tuvoli IQ, a real-time pricing engine designed to further streamline quoting and increase booking efficiency.

Core topics
Topics
Organisations
SHARE: