Tecnam P2012 Traveller
Twin Piston
The Tecnam P2012 Traveller represents a rare modern entry into the twin-piston commuter market, a segment largely abandoned by manufacturers after the 1980s. Designed by Italy's Costruzioni Aeronautiche Tecnam and first flown in 2016, the high-wing eleven-seater was purpose-built for short-haul regional routes where jet economics don't pencil out—island hoppers, bush operations, and thin rural links. Powered by twin Lycoming TEO-540 piston engines producing 375 horsepower each, the Traveller cruises around 190 knots and can operate from unpaved strips as short as 2,600 feet, a capability that has attracted operators serving remote communities in the Caribbean, Scandinavia, and the Pacific. Cape Air, the largest commuter airline in the United States, selected the P2012 to replace its aging Cessna 402 fleet and became the launch customer in 2019, eventually ordering over seventy airframes. The type's composite fuselage, glass cockpit with Garmin G1000 NXi avionics, and relatively spacious cabin—passengers sit in three rows of paired seats plus a three-across rear bench—offer a step-change in comfort and efficiency over legacy piston twins. Its operating economics hinge on fuel burn around 30 gallons per hour total and minimal crew requirements, making it viable on routes with fewer than a dozen daily passengers. SkyMeter has tracked 1 flights across 1 airframes and 1 operators, with N415GE LLC the largest observed operator.
Safety in context
The incident rate counts flights with ANY safety event detected by SkyMeter — go-arounds (a routine response, not a failure), unstable-approach gate flags (advisory thresholds), rejected takeoffs (the system working as designed), and runway events. It is NOT an accident rate or fatality rate. For accident statistics, refer to the NTSB Aviation Accident Database (USA) or the Aviation Safety Network. See methodology for what each event type measures.
Performance
Speed envelope & approach
Dimensions
Airframe geometry
Weight & identification
Operating limits
Top operators
By fleet size · last 7 days
Safety profile
Flagged flights · last 7 days
Family
Related variants
No related variants.
Recent incidents
Flagged flights of SMAX
Recent flights
Real flights of SMAX · airborne ≥ 20 min






