REVIEW · MIAMI
Miami: Romantic 1-Hour Private Flight Tour with Champagne
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Eagles Air Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A sky-high date beats another restaurant reservation. This 1-hour private flight over Miami hands you clear aerial views of South Beach, Key Biscayne, Star Island, and the downtown skyline, plus live narration in English and Spanish. You’ll also get non-alcoholic champagne to toast mid-flight, which is a small detail that somehow makes the whole thing feel special.
I especially like that it’s truly private: you’re in a Cessna 172 with your own bilingual, FAA-certified pilot and your own group. I also like the focus on what you can’t see from the ground—tiny shoreline shapes, island layouts, and skyline angles that only look “right” from above.
One thing to consider: the flight is weather-dependent, so if conditions aren’t favorable, the experience won’t happen on that schedule. Also, there are weight and comfort limits, and it’s not a good fit for everyone.
In This Review
- Quick Takeaways
- Entering the Moment: What Makes This Flight Work
- From Eagles Air Tours to the Plane: Logistics That Matter
- The 1-Hour Route: South Beach, Skyline, and the “From Above” Magic
- The South Beach shoreline views
- Miami skyline from Biscayne Bay
- Floating through the clouds for photos
- Key Biscayne, Venetian Causeway, Star Island, and Palm Islands
- Key Biscayne: the island feel
- Venetian Causeway: the “connector” view
- Star Island: the celebrity-level perspective
- Palm Islands: seeing the chain effect
- Bilingual Live Narration: Getting More Than Pretty Views
- Champagne Toast, but Keep It Non-Alcoholic
- Safety, Comfort Rules, and Who This Flight Fits
- Price and Value: Is $115 Worth a Private Plane?
- Who Should Book This Private Flight
- Should You Book This Miami Private Flight?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the Miami private flight tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where do I meet the tour?
- Is the pilot certified?
- What language is the narration available in?
- Does the tour include champagne?
- What should I bring and what restrictions apply?
Quick Takeaways

- Private Cessna 172: Your flight is tailored to your group, not a big shared tour.
- Bilingual live narration: Pilot guidance in English and Spanish keeps it fun and understandable.
- South Beach to downtown in one sweep: You cover shoreline, islands, and skyline without changing locations.
- Star Island and Key Biscayne from above: Great for photos and for seeing the geography clearly.
- Non-alcoholic champagne toast: A romantic touch that doesn’t involve alcohol.
- Easy-to-miss meeting details: You meet at Eagles Air Tours inside Reliance Aviation—show up on time.
Entering the Moment: What Makes This Flight Work

Miami is all angles—palm trees, street art, skyline light, and the waterline that changes every hour. This tour works because it turns that “Miami look” into something you can actually understand. From the air, South Beach stops being just a stretch of sand and becomes a layout. You see the shoreline curve, the hotel zones, and the way the bay cuts into the city.
The tour is also built for romance without being complicated. You don’t need a fancy plan, just two people who want to feel like the city is theirs for an hour. And because the champagne is non-alcoholic, you keep the vibe celebratory without the usual “how much did we drink?” factor.
The other big plus is the narration. You’ll get live guidance (English and Spanish) and an audio guide (also English and Spanish). That means you’re not just staring out a window—you’re learning what you’re actually looking at while you’re looking at it.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Miami
From Eagles Air Tours to the Plane: Logistics That Matter

You meet at Eagles Air Tours, located inside Reliance Aviation. That’s the kind of detail that saves stress: arrive with enough time to find the correct building and check in.
From there, you’ll hop into a private Cessna 172. The tour includes airplane headsets, which is practical—aircraft noise would make conversation hard without them. Expect live narration during the flight, so the headset matters for more than just comfort.
You should plan around what’s not included. There’s no hotel pickup or drop-off, and food and beverages aren’t included. That’s fine for a one-hour experience, but it does mean you should eat before you go. Also, you won’t be bringing snacks onto the plane—food is listed as not allowed—so keep it simple.
Bring your passport or ID card. You’ll also need to sign a waiver before your flight. That’s normal for aviation, but it’s also one more reason to arrive early. Don’t treat this like a quick walk-in thing.
The 1-Hour Route: South Beach, Skyline, and the “From Above” Magic

This flight is all about a clean, scenic loop. You start over South Beach area and then expand your view outward to the islands and downtown. In one hour, you get a visual summary of Miami that you just can’t recreate from a car window.
The South Beach shoreline views
The standout is seeing South Beach from the air along the shoreline. From the ground, you get buildings and beach clubs. From above, you get the big picture: the shape of the coast, the spacing between major stretches of beachfront, and the way the coastline meets the water.
The tour description emphasizes soaring over the golden beaches and luxurious island mansions before the view shifts toward the skyline. That change of scenery is a big part of why the flight feels like more than just “pretty pictures.” You’re watching Miami transition.
Miami skyline from Biscayne Bay
Next comes the downtown perspective. You’ll see skyscrapers from Biscayne Bay, which is different from getting a city view from land. Water changes everything: it adds reflections, it softens glare, and it makes the skyline look more geometric.
You’ll get a bird’s-eye sense of where the city concentrates and how the bay acts like a divider and connector at the same time. It’s especially satisfying when you’re trying to understand Miami’s layout without spending the whole day driving around.
You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Miami
Floating through the clouds for photos
The flight also notes traveling through clouds over the South Beach shoreline. That’s not just a cool moment for photos—it can help with contrast. When you see brighter sunlight hitting the shoreline below while the clouds sit above, your photos can look dramatic and “Miami movie trailer” in a way ground-level shots rarely do.
Bring your camera or phone, but also remember: aircraft access is limited by safety rules and seat positioning. You’ll likely take photos in bursts, then just look. That’s the right balance.
Key Biscayne, Venetian Causeway, Star Island, and Palm Islands

After South Beach and the downtown skyline angle, the flight continues over the key island landmarks that most people only recognize by name. From above, you understand why they’re famous.
Key Biscayne: the island feel
Key Biscayne shows you the Miami you can’t fully reach with a quick trip: more space, more water, more separation from the city’s noise. From the air, the island reads like its own world—great for couples who want a “we left the city” feeling without traveling far.
Venetian Causeway: the “connector” view
The Venetian Causeway is one of those spots you might drive across without thinking about it. From above, you see it as a deliberate line across the water. It’s a good contrast to the beach sections: instead of sand and hotels, it’s geometry and channels.
Star Island: the celebrity-level perspective
Star Island is one of the most talked-about names in Miami. From the air, it becomes less about fame and more about placement. You can see how it sits in relation to other islands and how it connects visually to the rest of the coastline.
This is also a strong photo moment. Even if you don’t care about celebrity lore, the island shape and its waterfront edges are much easier to appreciate from the cockpit than from the shoreline.
Palm Islands: seeing the chain effect
Palm Islands round out the island loop. The value here is the sense of sequence—how one island leads to another, how the water gaps look, and how the coastline changes rhythm as you move along it.
If you like taking landscape photos or you’re the type who always asks, Where is that in relation to everything else? this part delivers. You get answers fast.
Bilingual Live Narration: Getting More Than Pretty Views

This tour includes live narration and an audio guide in English and Spanish. That matters because Miami has a lot of place names that can feel random when you’re just watching from a window. With bilingual guidance, you’re more likely to remember the order and the location of what you see.
The pilot also plays a big role. One review highlighted the pilot David and praised the attention that made the flight feel unforgettable. That matches what you’d hope for in a private flight: a calm, focused pilot who keeps the experience smooth and informative.
There’s also real-world evidence of safety-minded professionalism. Another review described the pilot aborting the first takeoff attempt, then checking the machine fully before trying again. That’s the kind of behavior you want to hear about after the fact, because it signals a safety-first mindset rather than “push it through.”
One caution from feedback: clarity can vary. One review noted the pilot was somewhat harder to understand. If you’re picky about audio clarity, this is worth considering—headsets are included, but how well you catch speech depends on timing, volume, and your comfort with accents.
Champagne Toast, but Keep It Non-Alcoholic

You’ll toast with non-alcoholic champagne. That’s a nice sweet spot for a romantic flight: it feels celebratory, looks good in photos, and keeps things light. Since alcoholic drinks aren’t allowed in the vehicle, and alcoholic beverages aren’t included, this is essentially a ready-made “date moment” without the added rules and logistics of bringing drinks.
Also, the tour doesn’t include other beverages. So don’t expect a full bar situation. The point is the toast—one small ritual to mark the experience as yours.
Safety, Comfort Rules, and Who This Flight Fits

A flight like this has firm boundaries, and they’re not just fine print. You’ll sign a waiver before flying, and the flight depends on favorable weather conditions. Aviation is like that: it’s not something you can force in bad visibility.
There are also specific restrictions that affect comfort and who should book:
- Not suitable for pregnant women
- Not suitable for people with mobility impairments
- Not suitable for people over 254 lbs (115 kg)
- Not allowed: pets, smoking in the vehicle, food, intoxication, alcohol and drugs, or alcoholic drinks in the vehicle
Those rules tell you something important. This isn’t designed as a flexible “anyone can do it” experience. It’s built around a small aircraft, limited space, and clear safety procedures. If you fit the criteria, you’ll likely find the experience surprisingly easy because it’s straightforward and short—just one hour, one route, and focused attention.
Price and Value: Is $115 Worth a Private Plane?

At $115 per person for a 1-hour private flight, you’re paying for three things: the aircraft, a personal certified pilot, and the premium experience factor of being in the air over Miami’s most photogenic zones.
Here’s how I think about value on this one:
- Private isn’t just marketing. You’re not sharing the same flight with strangers.
- You get a full “Miami snapshot.” South Beach plus island landmarks plus skyline views in one loop is efficient.
- Included extras reduce decision fatigue. Headsets, live narration, and non-alcoholic champagne are part of the package, so you don’t have to add much to make it feel complete.
Is it cheap? No. But it also isn’t priced like a half-day luxury excursion. For a couple wanting a memorable date that’s weather- and time-sensitive, an hour in a cockpit can beat spending hours in traffic and still not getting the skyline angle you want.
If you’re choosing between this and a typical city sightseeing plan, ask yourself: do you want photos that look like you traveled, or photos that look like you walked around? This flight is built for the first one.
Who Should Book This Private Flight

This tour makes the most sense if you want:
- A romantic date with minimal planning
- A fast way to see Miami’s coast, islands, and skyline
- A private experience without the hassle of group crowds
- Bilingual guidance so you’re not guessing what you’re looking at
It’s also a smart pick if you’ve already done beach time and don’t want another “stand and look” day. This one gives you context and motion. You’ll also like it if you enjoy taking photos from unusual viewpoints.
If you need accessibility accommodations, have mobility limitations, or are within the not-suitable ranges listed above, you should skip this and look for a different format that fits your needs.
Should You Book This Miami Private Flight?
If you and your date want a one-hour experience that feels like Miami from a new angle, I’d say book it—especially if you can aim for a time close to sunset. One review specifically praised the timing just before sunset for impressive views.
Just do yourself a favor and plan like it might not happen exactly as scheduled, since the flight depends on favorable weather. If you can stay flexible and you’re comfortable with the safety rules and comfort limits, this is a strong value way to turn Miami into something cinematic.
If you’re looking for a calm, private, aerial tour with real guidance in two languages and a ready-made champagne toast, this one fits the bill.
FAQ
What is the duration of the Miami private flight tour?
The experience lasts 1 hour.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $115 per person.
Where do I meet the tour?
You meet at Eagles Air Tours, located inside Reliance Aviation.
Is the pilot certified?
Yes. The tour includes your own bilingual FAA-certified pilot.
What language is the narration available in?
Live narration is available in English and Spanish, and an audio guide is also included in English and Spanish.
Does the tour include champagne?
Yes, you’ll get non-alcoholic champagne.
What should I bring and what restrictions apply?
Bring a passport or ID card and be prepared to sign a waiver. Pets are not allowed, food is not allowed, and alcoholic drinks are not allowed in the vehicle. The flight is subject to favorable weather conditions, and it’s not suitable for pregnant women, people with mobility impairments, or people over 254 lbs (115 kg).




































