§A · Dispatch · Landing
Travis Scott's Embraer E-190 lands in Boston after a European swing, then heads to New York
If aboard, the rapper's return from a week in the UK, France, and Italy includes a customs stop in Boston before a likely connection to the New York area.
By celebplanes · 2 min read · Travis Scott

Travis Scott
Travis Scott's Embraer E-190, tail number N713TS, was tracked departing the small airfield at Avranches Le Val-Saint-Père (LFRW) in northwestern France on the evening of July 10, 2026, and landing at Boston Logan International Airport (KBOS) just over seven hours later, at 1:37 a.m. on July 11. The aircraft, a converted business jet originally built for regional airline service, covered roughly 3,300 nautical miles at a cruising altitude of 32,000 feet. As always, celebplanes tracks aircraft registrations, not people; whether Travis Scott was on board is not confirmed.
If Travis Scott was aboard, the timing and routing suggest a return from an extended European itinerary. The aircraft's recent movements, recorded by flight tracking data, show it spent the previous week hopping between the United Kingdom, the French Riviera, and northern Italy. On July 6, it flew from the New York area to London; by July 7 it was near Worthing, England, then Nice, France. Subsequent legs took it to Milan and Bologna before a final European departure from Avranches, a town best known for its views of Mont Saint-Michel. A direct flight from Nice or Milan to the U.S. would have been shorter, but Avranches offers a quieter alternative for a final refueling stop or a last look at the Normandy coast.


Boston is not among Travis Scott's frequently visited airports — those tend to be Houston Hobby (his home base), Van Nuys, Teterboro, Las Vegas, Orlando, and Austin. But Logan is a major international gateway with U.S. Customs and Border Protection facilities, making it a logical first point of entry for a private aircraft returning from Europe. The subsequent flight tracked on July 11 from a location near Boston to coordinates near Teterboro, New Jersey, reinforces that interpretation: if Travis Scott was aboard, the aircraft likely cleared customs in Boston before continuing to the New York metropolitan area, a destination he visits regularly for business and personal reasons.
The broader pattern of this trip fits Travis Scott's known travel habits. His aircraft frequently shuttles between Houston and entertainment hubs like Los Angeles, New York, and Las Vegas, often aligned with recording sessions, brand meetings, or live performances. The European leg — including stops in London, Nice, and Italy — could correspond to a vacation, a private event, or exploratory business meetings; Cactus Jack Records and his collaborations with McDonald's and Jordan Brand keep him in demand internationally. Without a specific event tied to Boston this week, the simplest explanation is that the city served as a convenient customs gateway before the final hop to a more familiar destination. For now, the aircraft's journey reads as a routine transatlantic repositioning — one that, should Travis Scott have been on board, ended with a late-night arrival in New England and a short flight south the same day.
Aboard the Embraer E-190


The aircraft
End of article · celebplanes