Development Elixir Aircraft was founded in 2015 with the goal of creating a fourth-generation aircraft that addressed the complexity and aging fleet issues of traditional general aviation. The prototype first flew in 2017 from
La Rochelle Airport.. After extensive testing, the aircraft received its EASA CS-23 certification in March 2020 and its FAA certification in July 2025. The initial aircraft production is at
Périgny, next to
La Rochelle. It is intended to move production to a new factory at
La Rochelle airport Design Unlike traditional aluminum aircraft (riveted metal sheets) or earlier composite aircraft (bonded halves), the Elixir uses a technology called "Carbon Oneshot". This process allows major structures such as the wing and the fuselage to be molded as single continuous pieces. This design philosophy reduces the airframe part count from thousands (in traditional metal aircraft) to fewer than 1000, aiming to lower maintenance costs and structural failure points. The aircraft features a
T-tail configuration and an unintentional spin-resistant
low-wing monoplane design. It is powered by a
Rotax 912 iS engine with a three-bladed
MT-Propeller tractor propeller, offering fuel efficiency suitable for flight schools. The cockpit is designed with a focus on ergonomics, featuring a full glass cockpit (Garmin G3X) as standard. Safety features include an explosion-resistant fuel tank and a
Ballistic Recovery Systems (BRS) parachute. == Variants ==