Socata Tbm-900
Single Turboprop· 127 globally registered
The Daher TBM 900 series represents the pinnacle of single-engine turboprop performance, blending near-jet speeds with the efficiency and operating economics of a turbine single. Introduced in 2014 as an evolution of the earlier TBM 700/850 line, the TBM 900 features a Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-66D engine flat-rated at 850 shaft horsepower, driving a five-blade Hartzell composite propeller. The aircraft cruises at 330 knots true airspeed at FL280, making it one of the fastest certified single-engine aircraft in production and allowing it to outpace many light twins while burning roughly 60 gallons per hour. What sets the TBM 900 apart is its pressurized cabin (5 psi differential, enabling a 10,000-foot cabin at FL310), advanced Garmin G3000 avionics suite with autothrottle and underspeed protection, and a useful load exceeding 2,400 pounds in a six-seat cabin. The type has become the dominant player in the owner-flown turboprop market, appealing to business operators who need to cover 1,000+ nautical mile legs efficiently without stepping up to a jet. Subsequent variants (the 910 with enhanced automation, the 930 with increased max cruise speed, the 940 with autothrottle refinements, and the 960 with digital pressurization) have kept the platform at the cutting edge of the segment. The TBM 900's operating envelope is equally impressive: a service ceiling of 31,000 feet, a range of 1,730 nautical miles with IFR reserves, and a balanced field length under 3,000 feet. Its combination of speed, altitude capability, and single-pilot certification has made it a favorite among high-net-worth individuals, air-ambulance operators, and corporate flight departments seeking maximum capability in a compact, efficient package. SkyMeter has tracked 1,071 flights across 346 airframes and 261 operators, with TVPX AIRCRAFT SOLUTIONS INC TRUSTEE 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
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Weight & identification
Operating limits
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Safety profile
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