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Piston · Buyer's guide

Cirrus SR22 buyer's guide:
what the records reveal

Every number on this page is computed from official U.S. government records — the FAA registry, the NTSB accident database, FAA Service Difficulty Reports and the Federal Register — for the 6,678 Cirrus SR22 aircraft currently on the U.S. registry, and reconciled to the airframes actually in this fleet: U.S. registrations get reused, so records filed while a registration belonged to a different aircraft are excluded. Nothing here is opinion or marketing copy: it is what the public record says about this type, and what that means for your pre-buy.

A Swiss-registered Cirrus SR22T (HB-KGC) — the turbo variant of the SR22 family
A Swiss-registered Cirrus SR22T (HB-KGC) — the turbo variant of the SR22 family. Photo: Simon Butler, via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)
6,678 aircraft on the U.S. registry
147 serial-reconciled NTSB records (2008–present)
272 service difficulty reports filed against this type (2001–present)
21 of those NTSB records involved fatal injuries

The U.S. fleet at a glance

The FAA registry lists 6,678 Cirrus SR22 aircraft, built between 2001 and 2026. The largest concentrations are registered in FL (613), CA (588), TX (513). A large, active fleet works in a buyer's favor: parts supply, mechanic familiarity and comparable sale prices are all easier to establish than on a rare type.

Type specifications (FAA Type Certificate)

CertificationNormal (14 CFR Part 23)
EngineContinental IO-550-N (SR22) / TSIO-550-K turbo (SR22T) — 310–315 hp
Propeller / rotor3-blade constant-speed (Hartzell)
Seats5
FuelAvgas 100LL, ≈92 US gal usable
Production2001–present
Type certificateA00009CH (FAA)

Representative type specifications — values can vary by serial/variant. Verify against the official FAA Type Certificate Data Sheet (drs.faa.gov, document A00009CH).

Where this fleet reports maintenance difficulties

FAA Service Difficulty Reports are filed by mechanics and operators when a component fails or malfunctions in service. Across the Cirrus SR22 fleet, 272 reports have been filed against this type since 2001 — most airframes have zero reports on file, with a mean of 0 per airframe. The systems mechanics report most on this type:

  • JASC 85 — Reciprocating Engine : 44 reports fleet-wide
  • JASC 32 — Landing Gear : 35 reports fleet-wide
  • JASC 74 — Ignition : 33 reports fleet-wide
  • JASC 24 — Electrical Power : 26 reports fleet-wide
  • JASC 78 — Exhaust : 24 reports fleet-wide

Filing is voluntary, so these figures understate reality — but the RELATIVE weight of each system is exactly where an experienced buyer points the pre-buy inspection first. Reconciliation note: 4,617 further reports filed under these registrations were excluded because the aircraft model declared in the report shows they belong to previous holders of the same N-numbers.

The accident record, in numbers

The NTSB database holds 147 accident or incident records serial-matched to Cirrus SR22 airframes in this fleet since 2008 — about 2.2 per 100 currently registered aircraft, of which 21 involved fatal injuries (most recent record: 2026). A further 94 records filed under the same N-numbers belong to different airframes (reused registrations) and are excluded.

Method: the denominator is the fleet currently on the FAA registry. Airframes destroyed and later deregistered leave that denominator, so this ratio understates lifetime accident history — read it as a fleet-profile indicator, not an accident rate. Fleet totals also reflect how the type is flown (training and commercial work versus private use), not just the machine itself. 5 records without a usable serial could not be verified and remain included.

Fleet-level counts tell you about the TYPE; what matters for your purchase is whether the specific airframe you are considering appears in that database — and U.S. registrations get reused, so a serial-number check matters. That per-aircraft lookup is exactly what a TailGuard report does.

Airworthiness directives to know about

12 airworthiness directives published since 2001 in our Federal Register database and matched to this type are currently open, including 1 recurring directive that must be re-complied with at set intervals. The full list of directives applicable to an older airframe is longer — build it at drs.faa.gov. The most recent in our database:

  • AD 2024-24-11 recurring · effective 2024-12-23 — report of failure of the upper power lever
  • AD 2009-26-01 · effective 2009-12-21 — inspect the compression fittings on the anti-ice fluid distribution lines for proper installation and repair any fittings that were not properly installed
  • AD 2008-14-13 · effective 2008-08-14 — replace the cabin door rod ends with new parts including a redesigned non-binding hinge pin that replaces the existing pin at the upper door hinge
  • AD 2008-03-16 · effective 2008-03-11 — inspect the rudder, aileron, and rudder-aileron interconnect rigging
  • AD 2007-24-13 · effective 2007-12-04 — install a drain hole in the left and right outboard wing tips
  • AD 2007-14-03 · effective 2007-08-16 — replace the pick-up collar support and nylon screws, of the Cirrus Airplane Parachute System (CAPS), with a new design pick-up collar support and custom tension screws

Superseded directives are excluded from these counts. Directives apply by type — no database can tell you whether a given airframe complied. Only its logbooks can, and that is the single most important paperwork check of your pre-buy.

Ownership turnover

Comparing monthly FAA registry snapshots from Aug 2023 to Jun 2026, 2,921 of the 6,677 observed Cirrus SR22 airframes — 43.7% — changed registrant at least once. This includes registrant-name changes that are not market sales — such as a transfer to an owner's LLC or trust — and newly delivered aircraft registered to their first buyer within the window. A recent ownership change is not a red flag by itself, but a rapid succession of owners deserves a direct question to the seller, and the registration timeline of the specific aircraft is worth reading before you negotiate.

Before you buy a Cirrus SR22

A records-driven starting checklist for this type — derived from the figures above, to hand to your mechanic:

  1. Inspect the reciprocating engine closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (44 reports fleet-wide).
  2. Inspect the landing gear closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (35 reports fleet-wide).
  3. Inspect the ignition closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (33 reports fleet-wide).
  4. Verify in the logbooks that the 1 recurring airworthiness directive matched to this type is signed off at the required intervals.
  5. Confirm engine and airframe times against the logbooks and the most recent annual inspection.
  6. Have a licensed A&P/IA perform a physical pre-purchase inspection — no records check replaces it.

Check the specific aircraft you're considering

This page covers the type. Your decision is about ONE airframe — its own NTSB history (serial-verified), its own service difficulty reports, its own registration timeline and risk score.