Cessna 172RG Aircraft

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About the Cessna 172RG

The Cessna 172 Skyhawk is the most-built aircraft in history — over 44,000 delivered since 1956, and still rolling off the Wichita production line today. This four-seat, high-wing, single-engine trainer and touring aircraft is the airplane that taught more pilots to fly than any other design. Powered by a Lycoming O-320 (160 HP) in most variants or the IO-360 (180 HP) in the 172S Skyhawk SP, the 172 cruises at 122 KTAS on 8-10 GPH with a useful load of 800-900 lbs.

Why it dominates the market. The 172 forgives mistakes — it is nearly impossible to spin, lands at 50 knots, and handles crosswinds predictably. The high wing provides excellent ground visibility and keeps passengers dry during rain loading. Thousands of flight schools, rental fleets, and private owners rely on 172s daily. No other aircraft has this depth of mechanic knowledge, parts availability, and community support.

Key variants and what to look for. The 172M/N (1968-1986) introduced the swept tail and are the most common on the used market. The 172R (160 HP, 1996-present) brought fuel injection and the Garmin G1000 in later models. The 172S Skyhawk SP (180 HP IO-360-L2A, 1998-present) is the performance model with glass cockpit options. The 172RG Cutlass added retractable gear for complex training. For pre-1968 models (172A-L), check for corrosion at the carry-through spar and comply with AD 2011-10-09 (crankshaft inspection for certain O-320-H2AD engines). On all models, nose gear shimmy damper condition and exhaust system integrity are common inspection priorities.

Market and pricing. High-time 1960s-70s 172s: $30,000-$65,000. Clean 1980s 172P with IFR avionics: $70,000-$110,000. 2000s 172SP with Garmin G1000: $200,000-$350,000. Factory-new 172S: $450,000+. TTAF, avionics suite, and engine time since major overhaul are the three biggest price drivers. A Cessna 172 for sale represents the safest, most liquid investment in piston aviation — you can always sell a 172.

Cessna 172RG Specifications

Model spec

The Cessna 172RG is a 4-seat single engine piston with a cruise speed of 122 kt (226 km/h), a range of 640 nm (1,185 km), and a useful load of 878 lbs (398 kg).

Performance
Cruise122 kt (226 km/h)
Range640 nm (1,185 km)
Engine & Fuel
Horsepower180 HP
Fuel Burn10.0 GPH (38 L/h)
TBO2,000 hrs
ICAO TypeC72R
Weights & Seats
Seats4
Max Gross Weight2,650 lbs (1,202 kg)
Useful Load878 lbs (398 kg)
Production1972–1980

Cessna 172RG Listings

No Cessna 172RG currently listed for sale.

This page updates automatically the moment one is listed — check back soon, or browse the Cessna range.

Cessna 172RG Variants

Variant Years Seats Cruise Range Useful load Price range Best for Listings for sale
172RG Cutlass 1980–1985 4 122 kts (226 km/h) 640 nm (1,185 km) 878 lbs (398 kg) $55K – $224K The retractable-gear Skyhawk — an affordable complex trainer and faster tourer for a buyer who wants 172 familiarity with retractable gear. 25

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Cessna 172RG Price & Cost

Cessna 172RG Price Guide

Key price factors: engine time to overhaul, year and airframe hours, avionics, damage history and logbook completeness — see the buying guide below for the full pre-purchase checklist.

Cessna 172RG Cost of Ownership estimate
Fuel (10.0 GPH × $6.20, 100 hrs)$6,200/yr
Annual Fixed (hangar, insurance, annual)$18,000/yr
Variable (per hour)$145/hr
Engine Overhaul (every 2,000 hrs)$30,000
Estimates at 100 flight hours/year. Actual costs vary by usage, location and insurance.

Buying a Used Cessna 172RG

Every Cessna 172RG faces a mandatory 2,000-hour overhaul, so the single biggest factor in used price is how much time remains before that overhaul is due — a fresh-overhaul airframe can be worth a large share of the $30,000 overhaul cost more than one approaching its limit.

What to check before buying

  • Time to overhaul — hours and years remaining to the 2,000-hour limit; this dominates resale value more than total time.
  • Logbook completeness — continuous, gap-free maintenance records; missing logs cut value and complicate financing.
  • Damage history — any prior accident, hard landing or blade strike; cross-check the registration against accident databases.
  • Avionics — a glass panel vs steam gauges materially changes price.
  • Pre-buy inspection — always commission an independent inspection by a type-experienced mechanic before money changes hands.

Frequently Asked Questions — Cessna 172RG

Is the Cessna 172RG Cutlass a good retractable trainer?
The 172RG (1980-1985) adds retractable gear and a 180-hp Lycoming O-360 to the 172 airframe. Used prices of $60-100K. Popular as a complex-aircraft trainer for instrument and commercial ratings. Cruise is 140 knots — only marginally faster than the fixed-gear 172. The retractable gear adds maintenance cost and gear-up landing risk. For training only, it serves its purpose. For personal travel, a standard 182 or Arrow is better value.
Disclaimer: All prices, cost estimates, and market values shown are based on asking prices from third-party sources and are provided for informational purposes only. AeroGurus is not an appraiser, broker, or financial advisor. Always obtain a professional appraisal and independent inspection before making a purchase decision.
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