Swiss Federal Audit Calls for Aviation Fleet Reduction
Government audit reveals inefficient use of federal administration's aircraft fleet, recommending downsizing or leasing options to improve cost-effectiveness.
Government audit reveals inefficient use of federal administration's aircraft fleet, recommending downsizing or leasing options to improve cost-effectiveness.

"The cost/utility ratio is unfavourable."
"The federal administration's civilian fleet is too large."
Inefficiency has a price tag, and for the Swiss federal administration, it is a staggering CHF 3.5 million per year. A scathing new audit released by the Swiss Federal Audit Office (SFAO) this Monday has exposed a critical lapse in resource management: the federal civilian aircraft fleet is bloated, underused, and burning through public funds. The verdict is swift and undeniableâthe fleet is simply too large.
The Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA) maintains a fleet of seven aircraft, ostensibly for pilot training and maintaining skills in non-complex aircraft. However, the reality on the tarmac paints a different picture. These assets are not serving the rigorous demands of a high-efficiency administration; they are gathering dust. The SFAO's report acts as a wake-up call, demanding immediate restructuring to stop the financial bleed. In a nation that prides itself on precision and fiscal responsibility, maintaining a fleet of four planes and three helicopters that rarely leave the ground is an anomaly that the government can no longer afford to ignore.
Seven aircraft. 2.6 hours a week. The statistics are damning. While the operating costs for the fleet surged to CHF 3.5 million ($4.2 million) in 2023, the actual utility of these machines has plummeted to negligible levels. The SFAO explicitly labels the cost/utility ratio as "unfavourable," a diplomatic term for a financial disaster.
The audit highlights specific redundancies that are hard to justify. For instance, the Swiss Security Investigation Service (SESE) maintains exclusive use of two high-value assets: a Pilatus PC-12 and an Airbus H-125 helicopter. While rapid response for investigators is critical, the exclusivity of these assets is a luxury the budget cannot sustain. The SFAO argues that the necessity of being "on the ground quickly" does not justify hoarding aircraft that sit idle for the vast majority of the week. This disconnect between the capital invested and the service delivered is the core of the audit's critique, signaling that the era of dedicated, exclusive fleets for every department must end.
Ownership is obsolete; collaboration is the future. The SFAO is not merely criticizing; it is prescribing a radical overhaul. The recommendation is clear: downsize the fleet or pivot entirely to leasing models. The Federal Office of Civil Aviation (FOCA) and the transport ministry are already grappling with these findings, considering a reduction in fleet size that could reshape how federal aviation operates.
The audit points to obvious, untapped synergies. The Swiss Army and various rescue organizations already possess trained pilots and fleets of their own. Why, the auditors ask, is the FOCA operating a helicopter identical to one used by rescue services without sharing resources? A single helicopter could easily serve multiple masters, slashing overheads instantly. The SFAO is urging the SESE and FOCA to break down their silos and seek closer collaboration within the federal administration. The message is blunt: realize potential synergies now, or face continued scrutiny for wasteful spending.
It is crucial to draw a sharp line in the sand: this audit targets the transport ministry's flight service, not the Confederationâs air transport service. The Federal Council's government jets, which fly under military registration and are managed by the defence ministry, are exempt from this specific critique.
However, this distinction does not absolve the civilian sector of its responsibilities. While the "Bundesrat jets" operate under a different mandate, the civilian administration's failure to optimize its CHF 3.5 million fleet undermines public trust in government spending efficiency. As the FOCA and the transport ministry move to implement these recommendationsâlikely shifting toward leasing and fleet reductionâthe pressure is on to demonstrate that Swiss efficiency extends to every hangar and runway under federal control. The status quo has been grounded; the only way forward is a leaner, more cost-effective flight plan.