§A · Dispatch · Landing
McDonald's Corporation jets to Washington the week a key labor case lands.
The fast-food giant's Gulfstream G600 arrives at Dulles as the FTC hears testimony on franchisee pricing rules.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · McDonald's Corporation
McDonald's Corporation
McDonald's Corporation flew from Michigan City Municipal Airport to Washington Dulles International Airport late Tuesday, touching down at 00:05 UTC on May 27 after a 1-hour-8-minute sprint at 41,025 feet in its sole Gulfstream G600, tail N1955M.
The trip lands the same week the Federal Trade Commission holds a public hearing on proposed rules that could reshape how McDonald's Corporation and other franchisors set prices with operators — testimony scheduled for May 28 and 29 in Washington, per the FTC's docket. The company has lobbied against the measure, arguing it would disrupt the franchise model that underpins its 40,000-plus restaurants worldwide.
The flight follows a pattern of short-haul hops in recent days: the G600 shuttled between Chicago, New Hampshire, and Michigan for a week before turning south to Dulles, suggesting the corporate team is consolidating at the capital ahead of the hearings. Since CEO Chris Kempczinski took the reins, McDonald's Corporation has kept its aviation assets lean — just one active G600 — and deploys it almost exclusively for regulatory and executive travel rather than routine supply chain visits.
Aboard the Gulfstream G600


The aircraft
End of article · celebplanes