Full-Time

Staff Flight Software Engineer

Posted on 10/31/2025

REGENT

REGENT

201-500 employees

Electric wing-in-ground seaglider manufacturer

No salary listed

Rhode Island, USA

In Person

Category
Aerospace Engineering (1)
Software Engineering (2)
,
Required Skills
Risk Management
C/C++
Requirements
  • Extensive experience in safety-critical software development under DO-178C (ideally DAL A/B), with a proven track record leading SOI preparation and closure
  • Deep expertise in RTOS and partitioned systems, including scheduling, WCET/jitter analysis, inter-partition communication, and real-time health monitoring.
  • Proven C/C++ flight software excellence, with hands-on experience in concurrency, memory management, and numerical robustness — able to design, implement, and review production-grade code.
  • Fluency in CI/CD for safety-critical programs, ensuring artifact control, provenance, on-target coverage, and fully reproducible builds.
  • Strong systems mindset with ARP4754A grounding, skilled in requirements decomposition, interface definition, and hazard-driven design.
  • Exceptional communicator and technical writer, able to align diverse engineering teams and regulatory stakeholders around complex safety-critical systems.
Responsibilities
  • Own the Software Certification Path: Lead the full software certification and assurance plan - spanning development, verification & validation, configuration, and quality - and guide staged reviews with class societies and regulators through approval.
  • Architect Robust Systems: Define partitioned RTOS architectures, including time and memory partitioning, inter-process communication, timing budgets, and health monitoring to ensure safety and reliability under all conditions.
  • Build and Review Flight Software: Establish interfaces and MISRA-style coding standards, design for determinism and fault tolerance, perform thorough code and design reviews, and directly implement or prototype critical avionics modules in C/C++.
  • Ensure Compliance with Rigor: Drive adherence to industry and regulatory standards across varying criticalities, maintaining requirements–design–test traceability, separation of roles, and compliance evidence at every stage.
  • Validate in Simulation and at Sea: Lead verification campaigns including robustness and fault-injection testing, requirements-based testing, MC/DC analysis, SIL/HIL on representative hardware, and structural coverage.
  • Qualify Tools and Methods: Select and qualify development and verification tools under DO-330, documenting constraints and mitigations to ensure compliance and reliability.
  • Manage External Software with Care: Govern SOUP and COTS acceptance, ensuring supplier evidence and mitigations meet safety-critical standards.
Desired Qualifications
  • Familiarity with advanced avionics architectures and standards, including DO-297/ARINC-653, hypervisor/IMA, DO-254, and DO-160 compliance
  • Hands-on experience with tool qualification and model-based methods, including DO-330, DO-331, and back-to-back testing for safety-critical workflows
  • Proficiency with safety middleware and fault-tolerant systems, including DDS, monitors, voters, and watchdog implementations
  • Expertise in verification and performance instrumentation, including MC/DC closure on target and timing analysis/profiling
  • Practical maritime and sea-trial experience, validating software performance in real-world operational conditions

REGENT designs and builds all-electric seagliders for coastal transport, using wing-in-ground effect over water. Its flagship Viceroy carries 12 passengers and moves from hull to hydrofoils and then to ground-effect, reaching up to 180 mph with a current range of about 180 miles and potential future versions up to 500 miles. It relies on existing dock infrastructure and is regulated as a maritime vessel by the U.S. Coast Guard with FAA support, allowing faster, lower-cost market entry than traditional aircraft. The company sells to airlines and ferry operators, has orders from Mesa Airlines, Brittany Ferries, and Japan Airlines, has raised over $100 million, and aims to provide zero-emission regional mobility while exploring defense use and building a large manufacturing facility.

Company Size

201-500

Company Stage

Series A

Total Funding

$87.1M

Headquarters

North Kingstown, Rhode Island

Founded

2020

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • $10 billion order book from Mesa Airlines, Brittany Ferries, Japan Airlines.
  • NZ$700 million Ocean Flyer deal for 25 seagliders in New Zealand since 2022.
  • $250 million UAE Edge Group investment funds Abu Dhabi manufacturing.

What critics are saying

  • US Coast Guard delays Viceroy certification due to WIG-hydrofoil risks in 2026.
  • Ocean Flyer cancels NZ$700 million order if 2026 human trials fail.
  • Chinese COMAC ekranoplans capture Japan Airlines routes in 18-24 months.

What makes REGENT unique

  • REGENT's Viceroy seaglider transitions float, hydrofoil, and ground-effect flight modes.
  • Classified as maritime vessel by US Coast Guard, bypassing FAA aircraft certification.
  • Uses existing marina docks, avoiding airport congestion for coastal routes.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Unlimited Paid Time Off

Paid Parental Leave

Relocation Assistance

Meal Benefits

Professional Development Budget

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

0%

1 year growth

3%

2 year growth

7%
BBC
Mar 29th, 2026
Oil prices highlight need to develop electric aircraft - Loganair boss.

Oil prices highlight need to develop electric aircraft - Loganair boss. Rob Flett,BBC Scotland News, Orkneyand Steven McKenzie,Highlands and Islands reporter A spike in oil prices due to the US-Israel war with Iran has brought the potential of electric aircraft "sharply into focus", says Loganair's chief executive. The Glasgow-based airline is working with US electric aerospace company Beta Technologies on a project trialling a battery-powered plane. Luke Farajallah said the ambition was to eventually have electric aircraft carrying passengers and freight. He said, meantime, the airline would seek to protect customers from rising costs due to the war. Loganair flies on routes across the UK, including services for the Western Isles, Orkney and Shetland, and to parts of northern Europe. Farajallah told BBC Radio Orkney: "The [electric aircraft] trial Hoyorkney is undertaking is one of the most exciting phases of my career to date, and it has come at a very interesting time in global history terms. "The oil price spiking as it has done over the last few weeks has really brought sharply into focus the need for us to find alternative methods of energy to propel our next generation of aircraft." He said the trial with Beta involved an operational aircraft that had been in production for some years. Farajallah said he could envision electric aircraft one day operating on "short hop" flights in Orkney. The airline boss said rising fuel prices were a concern. But he added that Loganair had already acquired half the fuel it would need for the coming year through a "locked in contract" which came with a certain price. He said an extra 20 to 25% of fuel was recently added to its stocks. Farajallah said Loganair was doing everything it could to avoid passing the "burden" of rising costs on to its customers. "We might need some small adjustments, but right now we would like to make sure that we don't increase proportionately air fares with the way fuel prices are going," he added. Large electric aircraft. Last year, it was suggested a vehicle that can cross water like a boat or a plane was a possible transport solution for parts of Scotland. US company Regent, which is developing the Seaglider technology, and Highlands and Islands Transport Partnership (Hitrans) were at the time in the early stages of a collaboration on the project. Rhode Island-based Regent's all-electric Viceroy Seaglider is designed to travel on water on its hull, or skim across surface on a hydrofoil and even fly at low level. Hitrans has been looking at other transport innovations as a way of connecting island and rural communities. In 2024, it said six large electric aircraft could potentially be used to fly passengers and freight on Scottish regional air routes. Bedford-based Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV) has been looking at how its Airlander 10 transport could operate from sites in Orkney, Shetland, Western Isles and the Highlands.

Mechtraveller
Nov 21st, 2025
Another Operator Interested in Ground Effect Vessels

Another operator interested in Ground Effect vessels. By Alastair - November 21, 2025 REGENT Craft, the developer and manufacturer of all-electric Seaglider vessels, and DHL Express have signed a strategic Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to explore the use of electric Seaglider vessels for short haul, coastal, and island logistics, at this week's Dubai Airshow. The Seaglider Ground Effect Vessel (GEV), a next-generation maritime craft, combines the speed of an aircraft with the convenience of a boat, offering high-speed, zero-emission transport. Through this partnership, REGENT and DHL will work together to assess the potential integration of REGENT's Seaglider vessels into DHL's existing logistics network to extend the capabilities of its regional and coastal cargo operations. REGENT (Regional Electric Ground Effect Nautical Transport) are on something of a roll at the moment. Armed with a $10 billion global order book from commercial and defence customers, they are currently building their first 255,000-square-foot Seaglider production facility on Rhode Island, USA, to fulfil those orders. It should be operational next year. Seagliders make use of a well-known phenomenon, known to pilots since the earliest days of aviation, 'ground effect'. This is the cushion created by high-pressure air trapped between wings and the ground or water while flying at low altitude, typically one to ten metres above the surface. The Russian military were quick to exploit GEVs early in the Cold War, building large missile-carrying "ekranoplans" as they named them, that could travel at record speeds over the calm waters of the Caspian Sea. REGENT's GEV, which has been advancing through more sea trials this summer, may not be powered by Russian military turbojets, but it is also pretty big. At 55ft long with a 65ft wingspan, the Seaglider is the largest-ever all-electric flying machine. What makes it unusual is its three-stage transition. At manoeuvring speed it behaves like a traditional flying boat. As it picks up speed it becomes a high-speed hydrofoil, and then, as the speed increases, it lifts out of the water completely. It can fly at speeds up to of 180mph for 180 miles, carrying 3,500 lbs (1,600 kg) of cargo, or 12 passengers (+2 crew). Importantly, it is called a Ground Effect Vessel, not Vehicle, because it is classified as a maritime vessel, regulated by maritime authorities like the U.S. Coast Guard and operated under maritime law. Well, four years ago Brittany Ferries also signed an MoU with REGENT, with a view to operating them on the English Channel, and two months ago Hitrans, regional transport partnership for the Scottish Highlands and Islands, announced it too is exploring the potential for Seaglider operations in Scotland.

Muvi TV
Sep 10th, 2025
New coastal combat for the Marine Corps?: Weapon of the Week

In addition to the Marine Corps, REGENT has partnered with U.S. Special Operations Command and the U.S. Coast Guard Research and Development Center.

Oil and Gas Middle East
May 20th, 2025
Innovation: ADNOC L&S Trials REGENT's Electric Seaglider for Offshore Transport

ADNOC Logistics and Services (ADNOC L&S) has announced a partnership with US-based REGENT to trial an innovative electric seaglider, the 'Viceroy,' for transporting personnel to and from offshore energy sites.

The Guardian
May 7th, 2025
REGENT Announces Seaglider Crew Training Process and Partner, FAAC Incorporated

NORTH KINGSTOWN, R.I., May 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) - REGENT Craft, the Rhode Island-based developer and manufacturer of all-electric seagliders, announced today it has partnered with leading training provider FAAC Incorporated to develop a training program for Viceroy seaglider crews.

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