Korea Develops Its First Small Passenger Plane
By wchung | 17 May, 2026
The 4-passenger Naraon is S. Korea's first domestically built passenger aircraft.
S. Korea will begin manufacturing small private planes and other civilian aircraft in 2014 based on a four-passenger plane unveiled Wednesday by the Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs at Korea Aerospace Industries in Sacheon, South Gyeongsang Province.
The plane was named “Naraon” based on suggestions solicited from the public. The plane’s development will be completed by 2013 and mass production will begin in 2014 for private and corporate sales, said the Ministry.
The Naraon has a top speed of 389 km/h (243 mph) and has a maximum range of 1,859 km (1,162 miles), putting all of Japan and China’s biggest major cities within its reach. It will be priced at about W600 million ($568,720) for use as a commercial commuter, a flight trainer and a leisure craft. It is build of a light, carbon-based composite material with electronically-controlled fuel injection. The Naraon is said to be 10 percent more fuel efficient than comparable rivals.
Korea had already developed an indigenous military training jet, the T-50 in 2005, and recently struck its first export deal with Indonesia. But the development of a civilian passenger aircraft requires additional technology and infrastructure that had not been developed in Korea until now. KAI had begun development of the Naraon in 2008. Ninety percent of its parts are based on home-grown technology.
When it begins building and flying commercial passenger planes, S. Korea will join a long list of 27 other nations that including the U.S., Russia, Canada, Brazil, France, Britain, Italy, Japan, Germany, Sweden, Israel and the Netherlands.
Recent Articles
- Trump's Ballroom Funding in Jeopardy After Senate Ruling
- Trump Says Xi Agrees Iran Must Open Strait, but No Sign China Will Weigh In
- Tesla Raises Prices of Model Y Cars in the US for the First Time in Two Years
- Trump Returns from China with Nearly a Pre-Tariff Reset
- Canada Deepens Arctic Defense Ties with Nordics After Trump Threats
- Big Step in Samsung's Grand Ambition Produces Deep Divisions and Strike
- Vox Momenti: You're My Main Branch
- Is Sheng Wang the Funniest Comedian Alive?
- How SpaceX Stacks up Against Some of the Biggest US IPOs
- US Debt Load Could Undercut Warsh's Plan to Shrink Fed Balance Sheet
