§A · Dispatch · Landing
Netflix corporate jet lands at Teterboro from Palm Springs amid East Coast business
The Gulfstream G550's cross-country hop likely ties to routine operations at Netflix's major New York offices.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Netflix
Netflix
Netflix's Gulfstream G550, tail number N533GV, departed Palm Springs International Airport on May 10, 2026, at 9:30 p.m. local time, slicing through the night sky at altitudes up to 45,000 feet before touching down at Teterboro Airport near New York City four and a half hours later, just after 2 a.m. on May 11. The flight, operated by the streaming service's corporate fleet, covered the familiar coast-to-coast route at speeds topping 589 knots, a testament to the executive pace of a company posting $12.3 billion in first-quarter revenue.
The timing aligns with Netflix's substantial New York presence, where the company runs key offices focused on content deals, advertising partnerships, and East Coast production oversight. With co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters steering a firm that grew profits 82 percent year-over-year, such trips often involve investor check-ins or strategic meetings in the media capital—especially after April's earnings glow. No public events pinpoint the visit, but the jet's path suggests business as usual in a city that hosts one of Netflix's largest U.S. hubs outside Los Gatos.
This East Coast swing breaks a pattern of recent California hops: the same aircraft shuttled between Los Angeles, Burbank, Santa Barbara, and Palm Springs in early May, likely for West Coast content scouting or downtime. Netflix's 2026 proxy allows personal use of the jet for named executives, with Sarandos logging $532,934 in such perks last year, hinting these flights blend work and the occasional recharge. As memberships top 325 million worldwide, the corporate bird keeps flying.
Aboard the Gulfstream G550


The aircraft
End of article · celebplanes