The **Cessna 172 Skyhawk** (often just called a 172) is one of the most popular and affordable general aviation aircraft to own, but costs vary widely based on whether you buy **new** or **used**, the aircraft's condition/year/avionics, location (affecting fuel, hangar, insurance), your flying hours per year, and whether it's hangared or tied down outdoors.
Estimates here are based on recent 2025–2026 data from aircraft sales listings, owner reports, and aviation sources (prices in USD; assume typical U.S. conditions and avgas around $6/gallon).
### Purchase Price
- **New Cessna 172** (e.g., 172S model with modern Garmin G1000 NXi avionics, autopilot, etc.): Typically **$400,000 to $600,000** (often in the $450,000–$550,000 range depending on options and customizations). Some 2026 models are listed as ready for delivery or lease around this ballpark.
- **Used Cessna 172**: Highly variable depending on age (1960s–2020s), total time, engine hours, avionics upgrades, and condition.
- Older models (pre-1980s, basic avionics): **$50,000–$100,000** (many in the $60,000–$80,000 range).
- Mid-age (1990s–2010s, good condition): **$100,000–$250,000**.
- Newer used (2010s+, glass cockpit): **$250,000–$400,000+**.
- Listings commonly show examples from ~$50,000 up to $450,000.
Most private owners opt for used models in the **$80,000–$200,000** range for a solid, well-maintained plane.
### Annual Fixed Costs (Ownership, Whether Flying or Not)
These are yearly expenses that don't scale much with flight hours. Assume moderate use (100–200 hours/year); costs can be lower if you tie down outdoors or do some maintenance yourself, higher in high-cost areas or with full hull insurance on a newer/expensive plane.
- **Insurance**: $700–$5,000/year (often $1,000–$3,000 for liability + hull; lower for experienced pilots/low hull value, higher for new planes or low-time pilots).
- **Hangar/Tie-down**: $1,200–$6,000/year ($100–$500/month; tie-down cheaper in rural areas, hangar pricier at busy airports).
- **Annual inspection**: $1,000–$3,000 (typically $1,500–$2,500; more if issues found).
- **Other routine/registration/misc**: $500–$2,000 (database subscriptions, charts, etc.).
- **Total fixed annual**: Roughly **$5,000–$15,000** (common realistic range $5,000–$10,000 for many owners; higher-end for new planes or premium storage).
Don't forget reserves for big-ticket items like engine overhaul (~$28,000–$38,000 every ~2,000 hours).
### Per Flight Hour Breakdown (Variable Costs)
These scale with how much you fly. Typical total **$100–$200 per hour** (wet, including everything).
- **Fuel**: Burns ~7–9 gallons/hour (avg 8 gph) at ~$6/gal avgas → **$42–$54/hour** (often the largest variable cost).
- **Oil/misc fluids**: ~$2–$5/hour.
- **Maintenance & reserves** (routine parts, tires, prop, engine overhaul fund): **$15–$60/hour** (many budget $50–$60 to cover future major items like overhaul).
- **Landing fees/parking elsewhere**: $0–$5/hour (averaged).
- **Engine/prop depreciation reserve**: Built into maintenance (e.g., $15–$20/hour toward overhaul).
- **Total variable/per hour**: **$100–$200** (lower end ~$100 if frugal/minimal issues; higher if including reserves or unexpected repairs).
For 100 hours/year, expect total ownership costs (fixed + variable) around **$15,000–$30,000** annually (excluding purchase). Many owners report ~$100–$150/hour all-in when spreading fixed costs over hours flown.
These are averages—real costs depend on your specifics (e.g., a well-maintained older plane with owner-assisted maintenance can be cheaper than a new one). Consult current listings (e.g., Controller.com, Trade-A-Plane), get insurance quotes, and talk to owners via groups like Cessna Pilots Association for personalized figures. Flying clubs or partnerships often cut costs significantly if full ownership feels steep.