- Business Insider tracked private jets landing near Davos on the first day of the WEF annual meeting.
- There were nearly 160, including one belonging to Marc Benioff, according to JetSpy.
- The most popular type was a Gulfstream G650, while London was the most common departure point.
Scores of private jets landed near Davos on Monday as the rich and powerful descended on the Alpine town for the World Economic Forum's annual meeting.
Business Insider tracked at least 157 private jets that arrived near the Alpine town, using data from ADS-B Exchange and JetSpy, which track FAA-registered aircraft.
More than half of the flights tracked landed at Zurich International Airport. Another 45 came into Friedrichshafen, a German city on the shore of Lake Constance, just over the Swiss border. The rest were spread across other smaller airports in Switzerland.
They included airplanes belonging to Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and the former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, according to data from JetSpy.
JetSpy also showed numerous companies' private jets arriving in the area, including those of Aramco, BlackRock, Blackstone, Citigroup, Google, HP, JPMorgan Chase, Lockheed Martin, and the quantitative hedge fund Two Sigma.
The most popular private jet was the Gulfstream G650, representing 31 of the flights tracked by Business Insider.
Buying one typically costs over $65 million. It can accommodate up to 19 people or be configured with a double bed and a shower.
The world's newest private jet, the G800, also appeared three times on Monday. Gulfstream only delivered the first one in August.
A Gulfstream G650 on display at an airshow.
Taylor Rains/Business Insider
At 7,600 miles, the longest trip was made by the Gulfstream G700 that JetSpy says belongs to Benioff. It flew for 14½ hours from Hawaii. Meanwhile, a commercial flight would have taken two stops and over 24 hours.
Other major journeys included airplanes arriving from Kuala Lumpur, Mumbai, and Uruguay.
Private jets flew in from dozens of different countries, including Sierra Leone and Montenegro.
London was the most popular departure point, with 19 flights coming from four airports in and around the British capital. However, many of these planes appear to have stopped only briefly on the way toward Davos. For example, a Google private jet spent 13 hours on the ground near London after arriving from San Jose.
10 private jets departed from around New York, seven from the Bay Area metropolitan regions, and six from Dubai.
Dozens more are expected to arrive throughout the week.
Tuesday also saw the arrival of jets belonging to Bill Gates, Michael Dell, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, according to data from JetSpy.
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