
MTJ Aviation’s flight operations are purpose built for transplant and time critical medical missions, where reliability, flexibility, and clinical awareness are non-negotiable. Our aviation model is designed around consistency—not opportunistic charter—ensuring our teams and aircraft are always ready to support lifesaving work.
Our fleet includes light and midsize jets selected specifically for transplant missions, balancing speed, range, and airport accessibility to support both team-based flights and organ-only transports. Aircraft are configured to accommodate surgical teams, perfusion devices, and specialized medical equipment while maintaining operational efficiency across short- and long-haul missions.
We employ full-time, highly experienced pilots who are trained to operate in the unique environment of transplant aviation. Our crews understand the urgency, complexity, and responsibility of each mission and work closely with dispatch and clinical teams to anticipate challenges, minimize delays, and execute safely under pressure. This dedicated staffing model allows for predictable coverage, reduced fatigue risk, and consistent operational standards.
Maintenance is managed in-house by our own experienced technical team, supported by a dedicated maintenance facility. This structure allows for tighter quality control, proactive maintenance planning, and faster issue resolution, critical advantages when aircraft availability directly impacts patient outcomes. Preventative maintenance and rigorous inspection standards are embedded into our operations to reduce disruptions and enhance mission reliability.
MTJ Aviation is ARGUS Gold rated and operates under FAA Part 135, reflecting our commitment to the highest safety and compliance standards. From pilot training to fleet oversight, safety is not treated as a requirement, it is a core operational value.
By integrating aircraft, pilots, maintenance, and medical logistics under one coordinated operation, MTJ Aviation delivers a level of accountability and readiness that transplant programs can rely on, mission after mission.