Every significant luxury platform eventually confronts the same structural question: how do you serve the clients who have everything, when “everything” is already your baseline offering?
The answer is not more inventory. It is access — the kind that cannot be purchased publicly, that does not appear on any booking screen, and that only exists for those whose relationship with the platform has reached a certain depth.
This is what the Godds Club was built to provide.
Access That Isn’t Listed
The finest private aircraft in the world are not available on request boards. The most extraordinary superyachts are not accessible through standard brokerage channels. The most coveted luxury automotive fleet slots during peak events — the Monaco Grand Prix, the Cannes Film Festival, the Riyadh Season — do not sit on public booking platforms.
Godds Club membership represents Hype Luxury’s curated access to these unlisted assets — relationships built with operators, owners, and fleet managers who make extraordinary inventory available to clients they trust, through platforms they trust, to clients those platforms vouch for. This chain of trust is the actual product.
Priority in Scarcity
The Godds Club member does not compete with the open market for aircraft availability during peak periods. Their preferences and dates are known to our team before the request is made. When an extraordinary asset becomes available — a 60-meter charter vessel with a last-minute opening, a Bombardier Global 7500 repositioning through a client’s destination — Godds Club members are the first call, not the last.
The Concierge Relationship That Compounds
Godds Club membership includes a dedicated relationship manager who knows the member’s preferences, schedule rhythms, family requirements, and travel history. This relationship deepens with every booking — not because data is accumulated, but because a genuine professional relationship develops between two parties who work together regularly.
The Events and Access Layer
Membership extends beyond mobility into the ecosystem that surrounds it. Introductions to private events. Access to sporting occasions that are not publicly ticketed. Restaurant reservations at establishments where tables do not formally exist. These are not manufactured amenities. They are the natural extension of a network that, by definition, serves the people who have access to these things — and occasionally the ability to share them.
No noise. No limits. Just access.

