Quick Facts
- Total industry cash burn: ~$12 billion (top 10 companies)
- Joby Aviation deficit: $2.66 billion
- Archer Aviation deficit: $1.8 billion
- Vertical Aerospace deficit: $1.5 billion
- Lilium deficit: $1.5 billion (before insolvency)
- Paying passengers carried: Zero
- Comparison: 4× the very light jet bust; 6× Boeing’s annual profit
- First commercial flights expected: Dubai (Joby/Uber) — late 2026
The Money Trail
Joby Aviation is the front-runner and the biggest spender. The company, backed by Toyota and partnered with Uber for air taxi operations, has burned through $2.66 billion developing its five-seat, six-rotor electric aircraft. It has flown thousands of test hours and holds an FAA Part 135 air carrier certificate — but certification of the aircraft itself remains incomplete. Archer Aviation follows with $1.8 billion spent. The company completed flight testing in the UAE and plans commercial service in Miami, Los Angeles, and Abu Dhabi. But Archer also faces a patent lawsuit from Wisk (now part of Boeing), and its path to FAA type certification has been longer than promised. The most dramatic casualty is Lilium, the German eVTOL maker that raised $1.5 billion before filing for insolvency in late 2024. The company’s jet-powered VTOL concept attracted massive investment but proved technically and financially unviable. Its assets were acquired by new investors who are attempting a restart — but the $1.5 billion spent by the original company is gone.The Very Light Jet Parallel
Aviation veterans see echoes of the very light jet (VLJ) craze of the early 2000s. Companies like Eclipse Aviation, Adam Aircraft, and DayJet raised billions on the promise that cheap, small jets would democratise private aviation. Eclipse alone burned through $1 billion before bankruptcy. The VLJ bust destroyed roughly $3 billion in total investor capital — a third of what eVTOL companies have already consumed. The counterargument: eVTOLs have better technology, bigger markets, and more sophisticated backers. Joby’s partnership with Uber gives it a built-in ride-hailing network. Dubai and Saudi Arabia are building vertiports. China’s EHang has already received certification for autonomous passenger drones.The Race to Revenue
The next twelve months will determine whether the $12 billion was visionary investment or expensive fantasy. Joby and Archer are both targeting commercial launches in 2026 — Joby in Dubai with Uber, Archer in Abu Dhabi. If paying passengers actually fly before the year is out, the narrative shifts from cash burn to market creation. But the physics of battery technology, the complexity of FAA certification, and the cost of manufacturing small, bespoke aircraft remain brutal headwinds. Even optimistic projections show years before any eVTOL company reaches profitability. For now, $12 billion sits on the burn side of the ledger. The revenue column is still empty. Sources: Vertical Mag, The Motley Fool, Flying Magazine, Autonomy GlobalRelated Posts




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