§A · Dispatch · Landing
Larry Page's aircraft lands at remote Idaho airstrip after week of Pacific Northwest flights
If aboard, the 35-minute hop from Provo to Sluder Airstrip would cap a series of movements between Idaho and Utah with no obvious public event.
By celebplanes · 3 min read · Larry Page

Larry Page
Larry Page's Gulfstream G650ER, tail number N618PB, was tracked departing Provo Municipal Airport in Utah at 3:09 AM UTC on July 8, 2026, and arriving at Sluder Airstrip in Idaho 35 minutes later after a brief climb to 30,000 feet and a maximum ground speed of 502 knots. The aircraft, a 2022 model managed by Blue City Holdings, has been unusually active in the Pacific Northwest over the past two weeks, shuttling between Provo and Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, with stops in New York and Montana along the way.
If Larry Page was aboard, the timing would place him at a remote private airstrip in rural Idaho — ID16, near the town of Yellow Pine — with no major conferences, court dates, or public appearances reported in the area this week. Sluder Airstrip sits in the Payette National Forest, roughly 100 miles north of Boise, and is primarily used for recreational access to backcountry cabins and fishing lodges. The destination suggests a personal retreat rather than a business obligation, consistent with Larry Page's well-documented preference for privacy since stepping down as Alphabet's CEO in 2019.


This flight follows a pattern of low-profile domestic travel. Over the past week, N618PB flew from Coeur d'Alene to Provo on July 7, then back to an area near Hailey, Idaho, before returning to Provo later that same day — movements that trace a figure-eight over the region. Earlier, on July 3, the aircraft traveled from Elk City, Idaho, to Provo, and on July 1 it flew from Coeur d'Alene to New York's East Hampton Airport, a frequent destination for Silicon Valley elites. The recurring Idaho stops align with Larry Page's known affinity for the Mountain West; his home base remains Provo, Utah, per aircraft registration data, and he has no confirmed residence in Idaho.
Larry Page's recent flight history shows a clear gravitational pull toward the Pacific Northwest. Since late June, N618PB has made five trips between Provo and Coeur d'Alene, with side trips to Montana and New York. This Idaho visit, if he was aboard, would mark the sixth such movement in two weeks — a notable uptick from his typical pattern of flights to Miami, Austin, or Fiji. The shift may reflect personal or family reasons, or simply a summer retreat away from the public eye. As reported by TechCrunch in January, Larry Page has been loosening his business ties to California amid a proposed state wealth tax, moving entities like his family office Koop to Delaware and his flying car startup One Aero to Florida. Those moves, combined with his $173 million Miami property purchases in late 2025, suggest a billionaire in geographic flux — but this week, the aircraft's path points not to a tax haven, but to a quiet patch of Idaho forest.
For a figure as reclusive as Larry Page, a 35-minute flight to an unpaved airstrip in the Payette National Forest is less a news event than a confirmation of a lifestyle. The aircraft moves; the man, if aboard, remains unseen. That, perhaps, is the point.
Aboard the Gulfstream G650ER


The aircraft
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