But it was big news for the popular Telegraaf tabloid that their king was co-piloting KLM planes twice a month - most recently flying to Norway this week with Captain Maarten Putman.
"I think flying is just amazing," the king told the Dutch paper, on his boyhood dream.
"You can't take your day-to-day problems with you into the air. You can completely switch off and focus on something else. That, for me, is the most relaxing thing about flying."
He added that before the 9/11 attacks in 2001, when the cockpit door was open, people would sometimes spot him and snap a picture, and even now "some people recognise my voice on the call in flight".
But, he said, after 21 years of flying for Martinair and then KLM Cityhopper's service, he is retraining to fly the KLM Boeing 737 as the Fokker 70 is being retired.
Putman, who flies with the king frequently, told the Telegraaf: "When we put on our KLM uniform, I'm in command and the king is the co-pilot. For the relatively few hours he flies, he is always very sharp."
And, come the summer - assuming he passes his exams with flying colours - this king hopes to carry on serving his people from behind the joystick.