In the 1960s, at the New York City World;s Fair, I watched a man with a back-pack rocket fly up into the sky, hover, move around a bit, and land. It was said that a consumer model would be available within the next 10 years. I'm still waiting!
The popular cartoon, The Jetsons, featured privately owned flying cars. Another nice dream...
In the 1970s I had a neighbor who put together a mechanical kit that resulted in a one person helicopter. He kept it locked up in his garage and would take it out and fly during summer weekends. I thought that was the coolest thing ever!
Now, nearly 60 years later, we may be at the dawn of personal flying vehicles. But they don't seem as consumer friendly as the Jetson's flying car .
Smart Cities
When will we have flying cars? Maybe sooner than you think.
After decades of promises, personal air vehicles are finally getting close to commercial reality-but you still probably won't own one
by Gideon Lichfield
Feb 13, 2019
Two weeks ago I would have said flying cars were still firmly in the realm of techno-utopian fantasy, as they have been for decades. Now I'm not quite so sure.
In the coming few years nearly 20 small airborne vehicles are supposedly hitting the market (see table below). Some are drone-like, with anywhere from four to 18 rotors keeping them aloft. Most are fixed-wing craft with propellers that point upwards for vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), and tilt forward for flight.
Some are also more realistic than others. While both Airbus and Boeing have projects under way, a raft of smaller companies are pushing aggressive time lines as well. Germany's Volocopter plans to start trials this year of a flying taxi in Singapore. Uber has claimed it will start test runs next year for a service between Frisco, Texas, and the Dallas-Fort Worth airport,and that it plans to start commercial flights in 2023; it has five flying-car makers as partners.
Sign up for The Download - your daily dose of what's up in emerging technology
Also stay updated on MIT Technology Review initiatives and events?
YesNo
But will they ever be safe, let alone affordable for anyone who isn't mega-rich? At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, I moderated a panel of experts who made a persuasive case that they could be-though, to be fair, most of the speakers had an interest in doing so.
The panelists were Dirk Carsten Hoke, CEO of Airbus; Ross Perot Jr., a Texas real estate mogul who is helping Uber start up the flying taxi service in Dallas; Liu Fang, director-general of the International Civil Aviation Organization; and Ion Yadigaroglu, a managing partner at Capricorn Investments , which has a stake in Joby Aviation. The panel was under the Chatham House rule, which means I can't report specific statements, but this was the gist.
Flying cars currently in development
The popular cartoon, The Jetsons, featured privately owned flying cars. Another nice dream...
In the 1970s I had a neighbor who put together a mechanical kit that resulted in a one person helicopter. He kept it locked up in his garage and would take it out and fly during summer weekends. I thought that was the coolest thing ever!
Now, nearly 60 years later, we may be at the dawn of personal flying vehicles. But they don't seem as consumer friendly as the Jetson's flying car .

Smart Cities
When will we have flying cars? Maybe sooner than you think.
After decades of promises, personal air vehicles are finally getting close to commercial reality-but you still probably won't own one
by Gideon Lichfield
Feb 13, 2019
Two weeks ago I would have said flying cars were still firmly in the realm of techno-utopian fantasy, as they have been for decades. Now I'm not quite so sure.
In the coming few years nearly 20 small airborne vehicles are supposedly hitting the market (see table below). Some are drone-like, with anywhere from four to 18 rotors keeping them aloft. Most are fixed-wing craft with propellers that point upwards for vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL), and tilt forward for flight.
Some are also more realistic than others. While both Airbus and Boeing have projects under way, a raft of smaller companies are pushing aggressive time lines as well. Germany's Volocopter plans to start trials this year of a flying taxi in Singapore. Uber has claimed it will start test runs next year for a service between Frisco, Texas, and the Dallas-Fort Worth airport,and that it plans to start commercial flights in 2023; it has five flying-car makers as partners.
Sign up for The Download - your daily dose of what's up in emerging technology
Also stay updated on MIT Technology Review initiatives and events?
YesNo
But will they ever be safe, let alone affordable for anyone who isn't mega-rich? At the World Economic Forum in Davos last month, I moderated a panel of experts who made a persuasive case that they could be-though, to be fair, most of the speakers had an interest in doing so.
The panelists were Dirk Carsten Hoke, CEO of Airbus; Ross Perot Jr., a Texas real estate mogul who is helping Uber start up the flying taxi service in Dallas; Liu Fang, director-general of the International Civil Aviation Organization; and Ion Yadigaroglu, a managing partner at Capricorn Investments , which has a stake in Joby Aviation. The panel was under the Chatham House rule, which means I can't report specific statements, but this was the gist.
Flying cars currently in development
Name & manufacturer | Type | First manned flight* | Expected delivery |
---|---|---|---|
Aeromobil 4.0 | Folding-wing STOL | 2014 (3.0 model) | 2020 |
Aeromobil 5.0 | Folding-wing VTOL | N/A | 2025 or later |
Pop.Up Next (Airbus/Audi) | Quadcopter | 2018 (scale model only) | ? |
Vahana (Airbus) | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2018 | 2020 |
Aurora (Boeing) | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2019 | 2023 (for Uber) |
Ehang 184 | Quadcopter | 2018 | 2019? |
Volocopter | 18-rotor copter | 2016 | Trials in 2019 |
Joby Aviation | Fixed-wing VTOL | N/A | ? |
Lilium | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2017 | Before 2025 |
Moller Skycar | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2003 | ? |
Pal-V | Single-rotor gyrocopter | 2012 | 2020 |
Terrafugia Transition | Folding-wing STOL | 2009 | 2019 |
VRCO NeoXcraft | Quadcopter with tilting rotors | N/A | 2020? |
Kitty Hawk Cora (formerly Zee.Aero Zee) | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2016 | ? |
Opener BlackFly | Fixed-wing VTOL | 2018 | ? |
Karem Butterfly | Fixed-wing VTOL | N/A | 2023 (for Uber) |
Bell Nexus | Hexacopter with tilting rotors | N/A | 2023 (for Uber) or 2025 |
Embraer X | Octocopter with rear propeller | N/A | 2023 (for Uber) |
Pipistrel | Fixed-wing VTOL | N/A | 2023 (for Uber) |
* Where known, first flight of a pre-production model |