
The race to commercialize flying cars is shifting from science fiction to investor reality. JPMorgan analysts see electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft entering a rapid growth phase, with the total addressable market for passenger air taxis alone projected to hit $100 billion globally by 2040. With test flights stacking up and regulators edging closer to certification frameworks, frontrunners like Joby Aviation Inc (NYSE:JOBY), Archer Aviation Inc (NASDAQ:ACHR), and Eve Air Mobility (subsidiary of Eve Holding Inc (NYSE: EVEX)) are now jostling for pole position in the skies.
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Joby Leads With Milestones
Joby Aviation remains the sector's most advanced player, thanks to a string of landmark test flights—including the first airport-to-airport eVTOL journey in the U.S.—and strong progress through the FAA's certification process, notes JPMorgan.
Strategic alliances with Toyota Motor Co (NYSE:TM), Delta Air Lines Inc (NYSE:DAL), and Uber Technologies Inc (NYSE:UBER) further bolster its commercialization prospects. Joby's healthy cash reserves give it runway for continued R&D, but its valuation already reflects much of its leadership premium.
For investors, the key is whether Joby can scale from milestones to meaningful revenue before competition catches up.
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Archer And Eve Close The Gap
Archer Aviation is pressing ahead with its Midnight aircraft, supported by FAA progress and defense-sector tie-ins like its partnership with Anduril Industries. Recent capital infusions, including backing from Stellantis NV (NYSE:STLA), strengthen its balance sheet, though losses continue as it remains pre-revenue.
Meanwhile, Brazil's Eve—spun off from Embraer SA (NYSE:ERJ)—has quietly built one of the industry's largest order books, with nearly 2,800 units valued at $14 billion. Its certification pathway is de-risked by Embraer's aerospace expertise, positioning Eve as a credible challenger.
Investor Takeaway
For investors, the eVTOL sector offers a mix of moonshot potential and execution risk. Regulatory timelines, capital burn, and public acceptance will determine who leads and who lags.
But with Joby, Archer, and Eve pushing toward certification, the battle for first-mover advantage in what could be a $100 billion market is heating up fast.
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Image: Shutterstock/Marko Aliaksandr