Anyone who has sat in bumper-to-bumper traffic on I-95 has probably dreamed of rising above the gridlock. Wisk Aero, a Boeing-backed Advanced Air Mobility company, is working to make that vision a reality. The company is developing the world’s first fully self-flying, all-electric, four-seat air taxi, and has identified South Florida as one of its earliest U.S. launch markets.
Building Toward a New Era of Flight
Wisk is no newcomer to this space. Founded in 2010, the company has built six generations of aircraft, logged more than 1,750 full-scale test flights across the U.S., Canada, New Zealand, Poland, and Australia, and amassed more than 330 patents. Today, Wisk has grown to nearly 800 employees worldwide, all focused on developing its 6th Generation aircraft—the first autonomous, passenger-carrying eVTOL with an active FAA certification program.
The Gen 6 is designed to carry four passengers, fly about 90 miles on a single charge, cruise at 120 knots, and recharge in just 15 minutes. What sets it apart is autonomy: there’s no pilot on board. Instead, every flight is monitored by a trained Multi-Vehicle Supervisor from a central Fleet Operations Center, who can step in if the flight plan needs to change. Wisk’s position is clear: autonomy is the key to unlocking safety, scalability, and affordability in air mobility.
South Florida’s Role in the Plan
Earlier this summer, Wisk signed two Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) that cement South Florida’s role in its rollout. The first, with the Miami-Dade Aviation Department, focuses on planning vertiports and preparing airports like Miami International, Miami Executive, and Opa-locka Executive for future air-taxi operations. The second, with the University of Miami’s Engineering Autonomy Mobility Initiative, lays the groundwork for collaborative research on sensors, batteries, and safety systems, as well as policy and workforce development.
In addition, Wisk has partnered with Signature Aviation, the global private aviation network that operates terminals in both Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach. That collaboration will help integrate future vertiport infrastructure into the private aviation ecosystem—a move that could extend Wisk’s footprint well beyond Miami-Dade.
What It Means for Business
The ripple effects for South Florida’s economy could be significant. Hotels and resorts may one day advertise aerial transfers alongside airport shuttles. Luxury residential and commercial projects could tout proximity to vertiports as a differentiator. Tourism operators could market air taxis as a seamless way to connect attractions across counties. And for the region’s expanding tech sector, advanced air mobility offers opportunities in software, logistics, and smart-city applications.
It’s important to underscore what Wisk is—and isn’t—today. The company has made remarkable progress: six generations of aircraft, more than a decade of R&D, and the industry’s largest fleet of eVTOL prototypes. But commercial passenger flights are not yet available. The Gen 6 remains in FAA certification, and Wisk’s target is to begin service by the end of the decade—possibly as early as 2030—in markets including Miami, Houston, and Los Angeles.
The Bottom Line
With Boeing’s backing, FAA certification underway, and local partnerships in motion, South Florida is positioning itself at the forefront of an aviation revolution. If Wisk delivers on its vision, the next time rush-hour traffic clogs the highway, the solution might not be another lane—but a quiet, electric air taxi rising above it.













