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How Vista chairman Thomas Flohr revolutionized the world of private aviation

Business Traveler US

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December 2025

IN PRIVATE AVIATION, true innovation rarely takes off from a boardroom—it begins with frustration. Two decades ago, Thomas Flohr turned his dissatisfaction with charter flying into a global enterprise that now defines how the elite move between continents.

- CORNER OFFICE STORY BY ENRIQUE PERRELLA

How Vista chairman Thomas Flohr revolutionized the world of private aviation

Flohr is the founder and chairman of Vista, the aviation group that reimagined how the world's most discerning travelers fly. He started with a single question: Why couldn't private aviation work like a global hotel chain—identical aircraft, identical service, anywhere on Earth?

Today, that question has evolved into a network spanning every continent. Vista operates more than 200 aircraft, employs 4,000 people, and records one takeoff or landing somewhere on the planet every two and a half minutes.

When Flohr entered the industry in 2004, he was chartering jets for his own business travel—and grew frustrated by the incredible inconsistency. “When you chartered an airplane, you didn't know what you'd get until you arrived at the airport. It could be a 20-year-old jet. I was very uncomfortable with that concept,” he tells Business Traveler.

It wasn't just about comfort—it was about standards. “In this industry there was no global leading brand,” he says. “That didn't make any sense.”

The frustration led to action. “I ended up buying my own airplane,” he recalls with a faint smile. “I had a great Italian designer who made it look good. I was bored by the usual white. I thought, Well, let's make them silver. But silver without the red stripe looked a bit boring—with the red stripe on it, it came alive.” That look became iconic—but it was Flohr's next idea that changed the industry.

“I said, 'Why does an airplane need a home base?'” he remembers. “I was told, 'That's where the pilots live, that's where maintenance is.' But you're not flying a $50 million airplane to where the pilots sleep. They should fly to where the airplane is.”

That question gave birth to VistaJet's floating-fleet model: aircraft that operate globally without a fixed base, continuously moving between client missions. “We flew to Cairo or Cape Town,” he says, “and just found a client there to fly somewhere else. That's how the concept was created.”

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