The problem with empty leg flights is not finding out they exist. The problem is that most people who try to book one never actually do. They register on one platform, check it occasionally, and either nothing matches or the deal is gone by the time they see it.
This guide is for people who already understand what empty legs are and want to know how to consistently land them. If you need the fundamentals first, the costs, the regulations, the honest risk profile, start with the cost guide linked above and come back here once you have that foundation.
What follows is the strategy that separates people who regularly fly private for less from people who talk about wanting to. It covers route selection, timing patterns, alert configuration, the negotiation angles most people never attempt, and the specific mistakes that kill otherwise good empty leg opportunities before they happen.
The Framework: How Regular Empty Leg Flyers Think Differently
People who consistently book empty legs approach it as a system, not a lottery. They make specific decisions upfront about which routes they are willing to fly, which times of week they can be flexible, and how quickly they can commit. Then they build infrastructure around those decisions and wait. The deal comes to them.
People who occasionally stumble across empty legs treat it as a spontaneous opportunity. They see a listing, think about it, discuss it with someone, decide they want it, and find it is gone. That cycle repeats until they give up.
The difference is not luck. It is preparation and decision speed. Every step below is about reducing the time between "deal appears" and "deal confirmed" to as close to zero as possible.
When Empty Legs Appear: The Timing Patterns
Empty legs are not randomly distributed across the calendar. They cluster around specific time patterns driven by when paying charters are most active. Understanding this calendar is one of the most underused advantages available to anyone building an empty leg strategy.
The seasons matter too
Summer in Australia, December through February, generates strong leisure charter activity and therefore strong empty leg volume on routes to coastal destinations. Byron Bay, the Whitsundays, and Broome see elevated traffic. Winter, June through August, generates strong activity on ski season routes to Cooma and repositioning traffic out of Melbourne Cup and AFL periods in the spring shoulder season.
The trap is peak periods. During school holidays, the Melbourne Cup week, AFL Grand Final, and Christmas, operators have less incentive to discount because demand for standard charter is strong. Empty legs still appear, but they are priced closer to standard rates. The genuinely deep discounts come in the shoulder periods, late February, mid-May, and September when charter activity is strong but not frantic.
The Fastest Buyer Gets the Best Deal
On Australia's busiest corridors, well-priced empty legs disappear within hours of being listed. The travellers who consistently book them have pre-made their decision criteria and can confirm within minutes.
Your alert system, payment readiness, and flexibility window are the three things that separate people who fly private for less from people who talk about wanting to.
Register Your RoutesThe Routes Worth Watching and Why
Not all routes generate empty legs in equal volume. The corridors below consistently produce the most inventory, which means more opportunities, more competition, and faster decision windows. Know these routes before you need them.
Setting Up Your Alert System
Your alert system is the difference between seeing empty legs and missing them. The goal is to receive notification the moment a relevant leg is listed, on a channel you check immediately, without needing to actively look for it.
| Platform / Source | Coverage | Alert type | Speed to notify | Worth registering |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Airly app Australia's largest aggregator |
East coast, national | App push, email | Near real-time | ✓ Essential |
| Operator SMS lists Direct from ACAM Pacific, MJET, others |
Operator-specific | SMS text | Immediate | ✓ Essential |
| FlightCharter.com.au Australian broker listings |
East coast focus | Daily digest or instant | ✓ Register | |
| Instagram / Facebook notifications Operator social feeds |
Operator-specific | Push notification | Varies by operator | ✓ Follow key operators |
| Charter broker relationship A broker you have used before |
Network-dependent | Direct call / SMS | Before public listing | ✓ Most valuable if established |
| Weekly email newsletter Generic digests from aggregators |
Varies | Weekly, not useful | ✗ Too slow for best deals |
The broker relationship advantage
The most underestimated source of empty legs is a direct relationship with a CASA-certified charter broker or operator you have used before. When an operator knows you are a genuine buyer on specific routes, they will sometimes call you before the leg goes public. This is not a formal service. It is what happens when you have established yourself as someone who moves quickly and does not waste time. One standard charter booking at full price can open this channel for multiple subsequent empty leg opportunities at discounted rates.
Negotiation: When It Works and How to Do It
Most articles about empty legs never mention negotiation. The assumption is that listed prices are final. They frequently are not, depending on the route, the timing, and how you approach the conversation.
When you have leverage
You have genuine negotiating leverage on an empty leg in three specific situations. First, when departure is within four to six hours and the leg has not sold. The operator is about to lose all revenue on that sector. A lower offer is better than nothing and they know it. Second, when you are a returning client or are introduced through a broker relationship. Operators prefer known buyers. Third, when you can offer to take a slightly inconvenient departure time or airport that makes the repositioning more efficient for the operator.
When you do not have leverage
Do not attempt to negotiate on Sydney to Melbourne or Brisbane to Gold Coast empty legs that have just been listed. These routes have deep pools of interested buyers and operators know it. Trying to negotiate on a freshly listed popular route is more likely to result in someone else booking it while you discuss the price.
How to ask
Keep it direct and brief. "I can confirm and pay immediately if you can do $X. Does that work?" is better than a long email explaining why you think the price should be lower. Operators are not interested in your reasoning. They are interested in whether you can commit quickly at a number that works for them. Make the offer, give a short window for the response, and be ready to pay the listed price if they decline.
The Mistakes That Kill Good Empty Leg Opportunities
Insider Moves Most Travellers Never Try
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Questions About Finding and Booking Empty Legs
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