In 2026, the cost of a decommissioned Boeing 777 varies wildly depending on whether you are buying it for scrap, part-out, or as a static structure. If the aircraft is being sold for its "airframe only" (meaning the valuable engines and avionics have been removed), you can expect to pay between $100,000 and $500,000. These are often purchased by movie studios, "airplane hotels," or theme parks. However, if you are looking at a "grounded" but intact 777 that is being sold during an airline liquidation, the price is significantly higher. For example, in early 2026, three grounded Boeing 777 airframes with their engines were sold for a combined $46 million (roughly $15 million each). For a private individual wanting to buy a "scrap" fuselage for a house or restaurant project, the primary cost isn't the plane itself, but the transportation and logistics; moving a 200-foot-long fuselage over land can easily cost $100,000 to $200,000 in specialized permits and heavy-lifting equipment, making the total "delivered" price much higher than the initial auction bid.