One of the most attention-grabbing details is the price. The company listed the X4 at $39,900, with a $5,000 deposit.By World Israel News StaffThe future of personal transportation has long been imagined as quiet aircraft lifting off from driveways and rooftops, bypassing traffic with the push of a button. At CES 2026 in Las Vegas, that vision looked a little less like science fiction and a little more like a product heading to market.Unveiled this month, the Rictor X4 is a single-seat eVTOL, or electric vertical take-off and landing aircraft, designed for short, low-altitude trips. The company is pitching it as an ultralight “hop-on-and-take-off” vehicle that could dramatically lower the barrier to personal flight.The X4 is powered by eight motor-and-propeller units mounted across four arms. Those carbon-fiber arms, along with the aircraft’s 63-inch (160-centimeter) propellers, fold inward when not in use, allowing the aircraft to be transported in the back of a pickup truck.Rictor says the aircraft runs on a semi-solid state battery system with dual-module redundancy, a design intended to enable a controlled landing if one battery module fails.The company also built in an emergency parachute system for added protection during critical situations. A centralized flight control system manages propulsion and attitude while continuously monitoring key flight data and overall system health to help maintain stability as conditions change.One of the most attention-grabbing details is the price. The company listed the X4 at $39,900, with a $5,000 deposit. Rictor says it is designed to be operated legally without a pilot’s license under the FAA’s Part 103 ultralight rules, positioning it as a “hop-on-and-take-off” vehicle meant to lower the barrier to personal aviation.Rictor said it plans to begin deliveries in the second quarter of 2026.“Our goal is not to compete with giants in the complex manned aviation track, but to pioneer a completely new, accessible market for ‘light aerial mobility,’” the CEO of Kuickwheel Technology said at the launch event. “The X4 rivals the private aircraft of high-end enthusiasts, but we’ve made it radically more affordable and simplified its usage.”If the company meets its timeline and regulatory expectations, the Rictor X4 could offer an early glimpse of what everyday personal flight might look like, sooner than many expected.The post Personal flight moves from dream to reality appeared first on World Israel News.