Apple shares have been flying high — and CEO Tim Cook has been flying in style.

The iPhone maker revealed that it has been requiring Cook to take a private jet for all travel, whether business or personal — a mandatory “perk” that cost the company $93,109 this year for pleasure trips alone.

Meanwhile, the Cupertino, Calif., tech giant hiked Cook’s yearly bonus by 74 percent as Apple reported higher revenue and profits after suffering a rare decline last year.

Cook has been forced to use private aircraft and barred from airport waiting areas “in the interests of security and efficiency based on [Apple’s] global profile” and his “highly visible nature,” according to a late-Wednesday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The tab for personal security costs totaled $224,216, according to the filing.

Apple noted that Cook’s personal travel counts as extra compensation, meaning the CEO needs to pay taxes on it.

The taxes shouldn’t be a problem, though, because in addition to his $9.33 million bonus, Cook this year gets a $3.06 million salary and $89.2 million in Apple stock, for a total of $102 million.

Since Cook took the reins from Apple’s late founder Steve Jobs in 2011, the company has seen its share prices soar more than 200 percent and has accumulated a war chest of over $250 billion in cash.

Apple’s stock surged 37 percent in fiscal 2017, more than doubling the increase in the S&P 500.

This fall Apple introduced the iPhone X, its most daring redesign of its flagship smartphone since the iPhone 6. This week, however, a Taiwanese newspaper reported that Apple has cut its sales forecast for the $999 phones, hitting Apple shares.