Joby Aviation stock climbed 3.8% on Monday after the company wrapped up New York City’s first electric vertical takeoff and landing air taxi demonstration flights.
Joby Aviation, Inc., JOBY
The aircraft departed from JFK International Airport and touched down at several heliports across the city, including Downtown Skyport and the West 30th Street and East 34th Street Heliports in Midtown.
The flights covered the JFK-to-Manhattan route in under 10 minutes. That same trip by car typically takes between 60 and 120 minutes.
The week-long flight campaign is part of the federal eVTOL Integration Pilot Program, which was set up by executive order to speed up the commercial rollout of electric air transportation.
The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey worked alongside Joby and the FAA to make the demonstration flights happen.
Joby’s New York presence is built on its 2025 purchase of Blade Air Mobility’s passenger business. Blade moved more than 90,000 passengers in 2025 and already has infrastructure in place at Manhattan locations and New York area airports.
Joby is working through the final stages of FAA certification. The company recently flew its first conforming aircraft for Type Inspection Authorization, a step that allows FAA pilots to run for-credit test flights.
Commercial plans involve partnerships with Delta Air Lines and Uber. The service is aimed squarely at airport commutes, targeting traffic congestion that cost New York commuters an estimated 102 hours in 2025.
The New York flights follow Joby’s Bay Area campaign earlier this year, which included a flight over the Golden Gate Bridge as part of its 2026 Electric Skies Tour.
The NYC demonstration marks a step forward in Joby’s push to operate in one of the most congested transit markets in the country.
Joby’s conforming aircraft Type Inspection Authorization flight was one of the most recent milestones in the FAA certification process before the NYC demo campaign kicked off.
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