Unmanned eVTOL aircraft developer AIR shared a key milestone this morning, successfully completing its first flight in a heavy-lift cargo aircraft – one of the world’s largest in its class.
For those unaware, AIR is an Israel-based developer and manufacturer of smart aircraft. That includes two versions of an electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (eVTOL) aircraft called the AIR ONE. The clean aviation startup has spent the last eight years developing and testing a passenger and cargo version of its AIR ONE eVTOL, through calculated simulations followed by full-scale prototypes.
It’s been two years since AIR delivered its first cargo aircraft, followed by what the company called the “world’s first uncrewed eVTOL Cargo mission – at night,” in 2025. Since then, AIR has received FAA Airworthiness, launching initial US flight operations in the State of Florida.
Today, AIR achieved a successful first flight of a new Heavy-Lift cargo eVTOL – a production-ready aircraft that has already seen dozens of orders.

AIR ‘s Heavy-Lift cargo eVTOL is “mission ready”
AIR shared a press release and flight footage (seen below) of its initial eVTOL flight, which the startup describes as the Production AIR Cargo-Heavy UAS (unmanned aircraft system). AIR said this aircraft, which offers a payload capacity of about 550 lbs., represents one of the world’s largest unmanned eVTOL platforms and a key milestone for autonomous heavy-cargo transportation.
Per AIR, the Production AIR Cargo-Heavy Lift UAS has achieved this initial flight milestone as a mission-ready platform, following over two years of development that included hundreds of test flights and deployments in real-world conditions. AIR co-founder and CEO, Rani Plaut, elaborated:
This flight milestone reflects what AIR has been building toward. We’ve spent two years refining this aircraft against real operational demands, not benchmarks or simulations. Delivering that now, at this scale, is what we set out to do.
Additionally, this aircraft is now one of only a few available VTOL aircraft categorized as a “Group 4 UAS” by the US Department of Defense. In commercial and humanitarian contexts, it enables mid-mile delivery, maritime resupply, and rapid aid deployment in remote or infrastructure-limited areas.
On that note, AIR’s heavy-cargo eVTOL has been purpose-built for a wide range of use cases, including remote resupply missions, contested logistics, maritime operations, humanitarian aid, and commercial cargo delivery. As such, a number of customers were already interested ahead of its initial flight. AIR states that more than 25 units of the Production Cargo-Heavy Lift UAS have already been ordered and paid for.
The core of this aircraft’s design is AIR’s production platform, built specifically for high-volume production. Unlike many other eVTOLs that will require a pilot onboard, AIR has integrated advanced autonomy and flight logic capabilities that “enable more reliable, repeatable mission execution with reduced reliance on human intervention.”
AIR’s eVTOL platform modularity also enables dual use, not just between passengers and cargo, but also between defense and commercial operations. AIR’s other co-founder and current CTO, Chen Rosen, also spoke:
This next-generation configuration taking flight is the culmination of years of engineering iteration and direct operational learning. Every design decision, from the motors to the flight logic, was stress-tested against what operators actually encounter in the field. The result is an aircraft built not just to fly, but to work.
As promised, here is the video footage of the flight as shared by AIR:
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