The vehicles are real. The investment is real. The infrastructure that makes those vehicles commercially viable does not yet exist at the scale any business model requires. Twenty-four vertiports broke ground in 2024 against a planned pipeline of 1,504. The honest state of AAM in April 2026.
The Language of Almost: What AAM Press Releases Say — and What They Actually Mean
Every major AAM OEM uses compressed language that implies commercial readiness ahead of regulatory reality. Here is a company-by-company credibility framework — with actual press release citations — and a proposed communication standard for a sector that needs one.
AAM Weekend Intelligence Roundup — April 2026
Four signals shaping Advanced Air Mobility this week: Archer’s Florida eIPP selection moves Midnight closer to H2 2026 operations, BETA Technologies completes 23 flights in Scotland and signs an expansion MOU with Loganair, Aviation Week surfaces the maintenance workforce bottleneck no commercial model is pricing, and Electra’s EL9 joins the eIPP as the one participant whose infrastructure math bypasses the vertiport dependency entirely.
The Industry Is Moving. But Where is the Industry?
Set aside the courtroom drama for a moment. The part of the Advanced Air Mobility industry that’s actually building things — certifying propulsion systems, rolling out new prototypes, deploying aircraft for emergency response, and pivoting legacy helicopter companies toward autonomy — is moving faster than the headlines suggest. Here’s a clear-eyed look at what happened in the past two weeks and what it means.
Electra EL9 Leads U.S. eIPP as Premier AAM Partner
Electra has been named the premier private company participant in the U.S. Department of Transportation and FAA’s inaugural eVTOL Integration Pilot Program. With 2,200 pre-orders worth nearly $10 billion and a hybrid-electric aircraft that takes off and lands in 150 feet, Electra is making a compelling case that advanced air mobility doesn’t need airports — it just needs the right aircraft.
Joby’s First FAA-Conforming eVTOL Takes Flight
On March 11, 2026, Joby Aviation crossed one of the most significant thresholds in eVTOL history: its first FAA-conforming aircraft took flight at Marina, California, officially entering Stage 5 — the final phase of FAA Type Certification. This is not a prototype. This is the production-intent aircraft that FAA pilots will evaluate before Joby is cleared to carry paying passengers. The finish line is now visible.
FAA’s Reorganization: Dedicated Office & What It Means for AAM
In the largest organizational overhaul in FAA history, Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy and Administrator Bryan Bedford announced a comprehensive restructuring that creates a dedicated Office of Advanced Aviation Technologies for eVTOLs, drones, and supersonic aircraft. The January 27, 2026 announcement elevates advanced air mobility to top-level status alongside traditional aviation operations, signaling that electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft are no longer experimental but core to America’s aviation future. With multiple eVTOL manufacturers approaching certification, the eIPP launching in 2026, and the 2028 LA Olympics showcasing urban air mobility, the timing is critical. This analysis explores what the reorganization means for AAM stakeholders, certification timelines, infrastructure development, safety oversight, and the path to commercial operations.





