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.
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)
| Certification | Normal (14 CFR Part 23) |
|---|---|
| Engine | Continental IO-550-N (SR22) / TSIO-550-K turbo (SR22T) — 310–315 hp |
| Propeller / rotor | 3-blade constant-speed (Hartzell) |
| Seats | 5 |
| Fuel | Avgas 100LL, ≈92 US gal usable |
| Production | 2001–present |
| Type certificate | A00009CH (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:
- Inspect the reciprocating engine closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (44 reports fleet-wide).
- Inspect the landing gear closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (35 reports fleet-wide).
- Inspect the ignition closely — it is among the most-reported systems for this type in FAA Service Difficulty Reports (33 reports fleet-wide).
- Verify in the logbooks that the 1 recurring airworthiness directive matched to this type is signed off at the required intervals.
- Confirm engine and airframe times against the logbooks and the most recent annual inspection.
- 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.
Browse the data: Cirrus SR22 fleet records · Method: how to check any aircraft's history