Saeli is a flying car engineered to rise silently above the city — gliding over the traffic on clean electric lift. It's the first step in a journey that doesn't stop at the skyline.
Saeli rises straight up from any pad — no runway, no rolling start. Distributed electric rotors lift it off the street in seconds and set it back down just as gently.
Engineered to cross a skyline at a fraction of a helicopter's noise — so it can fly where people actually live and work, not just out at the edges of town.
Saeli plots and holds its own route through managed low-altitude airspace, deconflicting in real time — so flying stays as simple as choosing where you want to go.
Every city has run out of ground. Saeli's first mission is to lift the daily journey off the gridlocked road and into clean, quiet, low-altitude flight — built and certified to a standard a nation can put its name behind. The flying car is step one. Where it leads is bigger than any map.
Saeli is open to the people and institutions who move things this big — the ones who'd rather build the future than wait for it.
The hardest problems in propulsion, autonomy and certification — and the people who want to own them, not read about them.
A new mobility category, built from first principles, with a generational market and a defensible technology moat ahead of it.
Joint work on the materials, energy density and airspace systems that turn city flight from a demo into a daily routine.
Sovereign-scale ambition: clean skies, a new domestic industry, and aerospace capability that's built — and stays — at home.
Saeli lifts off and flies its first route above the city.
Routine pad-to-pad flights across the metro, on demand.
City-to-city flight turns a day's drive into a short hop.
The program that opened the city sky reaches for the next horizon.
Whether you build it, fund it, research it, or set the policy that makes it possible — register your interest and we'll bring you in as the program opens up.