This week, Starbucks Coffee announced that it would let its CEO, Brian Niccol, have free access to the company jet for personal trips as a safety precaution. The move could force other companies to do the same for their executives.

“The assassination of the UnitedHealthcare executive has provided a unique opportunity to give boards air cover to capitulate to a CEO’s desire to travel on a private jet,” a board member of a publicly traded company who is getting pushed to follow Starbucks’ lead, told me.

The change came after the company conducted a “security review of risks” and “the Starbucks Board of Directors made the decision to enhance security measures for Brian,” a spokesperson for the company said. “This included a decision by the Board to require Brian to use private aircraft for all travel. With that requirement, the Board also determined that a quarterly review process provides more appropriate oversight.”

Starbucks Chairman and CEO Brian Niccol
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol can now use the company jet for even personal travel after the board determined it was necessary for his security.

According to an SEC filing that went public earlier this week, the review identified “credible threat actors” targeting Niccol.

Starbucks removed a previous $250,000 annual cap on personal jet use in September 2025. But sources are skeptical it was just about addressing a security concern.

“It wasn’t like he was flying in coach and they were worried he was in danger,” one executive at a publicly traded company told me. “He was flying private for personal travel before — he clearly likes flying private … he just isn’t reimbursing the company anymore.”

Starbucks is consistently ranked one of the top 150 companies by market capitalization in the US, with a more than $100 billion valuation. Niccol joined the company in Sept. 2024 and has worked to jolt slumping sales. For the quarter ending Dec. 28, US sales were up 4%.

Brian Niccol was appointed CEO in Sept. 2024 and has worked to combat slumping sales.

The new policy is a precedent for smaller companies to make similar moves — and it could ultimately backfire.

“Private jet use quickly becomes part of the narrative of a bloated cost structure when investors are upset with how a company is performing,” the board member stressed to me. “The first thing they look at is perks because it’s easy to attack and a good soundbite that a company is spending too much money on personal travel.”

NYNext has reached out to Niccol for comment.

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