yeah seems crazy dunnit .. and can see why some folks are getting excited about it.
Now, I am not an accountant (IANAA) but ... was just throwing some numbers together mostly out of my back passage but also using some mortgage planning tools (yes I am planning on buying a used 787

) but basically 10 years seems a realistic period to pay off the purchase loan (assuming not leasing) and make a little profit, before you have to do an expensive D-check or engine overhaul etc.
Lets say, taking some very round numbers...
LOAN
- list price was ~ $120m (Norwegian were an early customer)
- a 10-year loan at say 6% would be a cool 1.3m/month to pay off, ~19m/year (across life of loan)
INCOME
- aircraft one long haul per day with avg. 95% occupancy (Norwegian used these for long haul)
- and say ~500usd per seat per day and say 330 days of active duty per year
- 500 x 330 x 320 (pax) = ~ 53m / year
OP COSTS
- hours per year = 330 x 8hrs (flight) = 2640
- lets say $11,000 per hour (fuel, insurance, maintenance)
- personnel costs (50 non-flying staff / aircraft @ 50k ea.) = $2.5m / year
- total op costs 11k x 2640 = $29m / year
so this is pretty loose but you can see how they could easily be clearing a handful of million per aircraft per year
ie 53 - (29 + 19 + 2.5) = $2.5m
sources :-)
https://myaircraftcost.com/boeing-787-8/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Long_Haulhttps://www.norwegian.com/globalassets/ ... report.pdfhttps://www.calculator.net/loan-calcula ... zed-resultanyone else care to make a better informed loose stab at it?
edit: -
added non-flying staff costs re suggestion from Mike and a ref to Norwegian's financial statement