At the summit of purpose-built business aviation, three aircraft compete for a title that matters more than any manufacturer marketing will admit: the finest private jet in the world. The Gulfstream G700, the Bombardier Global 7500, and the Dassault Falcon 10X each make a compelling case — and each is genuinely better than the others in specific, measurable ways.
This is the analysis that cuts through the marketing.
The Gulfstream G700: American Confidence at 51,000 Feet
Gulfstream’s flagship is the most successful ultra-long-range business jet in history measured by orders, and there are structural reasons. The G700’s cabin is the widest in its class at 2.56 meters — a dimension that is not abstract when you’re standing in the aisle at midnight over the Atlantic. Seventeen panoramic oval windows create a luminosity that no other business jet achieves — the cabin feels genuinely spacious rather than impressively engineered.
The G700’s Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 engines are the quietest ever installed on a business aircraft — cabin noise at cruise is approximately 52 decibels, which is quieter than most restaurants. Range of 7,500 nautical miles covers New York to Tokyo non-stop, London to Perth non-stop, Dubai to New York non-stop.
Five configurable living zones can be arranged for sleeping, meeting, dining, relaxation, and crew rest simultaneously — genuinely independently, without compromise between zones.
The Bombardier Global 7500: Canadian Architecture at Mach 0.925
The Global 7500’s fundamental design philosophy is different from the G700’s — where Gulfstream optimizes for flow and luminosity, Bombardier optimizes for genuine architectural separation. The 7500 has four true living spaces: a forward club suite, a dedicated conference suite, a full bedroom suite with a flat door and privacy partition, and an aft lounge.
The bedroom suite — the first truly private bedroom in purpose-built business aviation — contains a full-size flat bed that doesn’t convert from seats. This is not a nuance. On a 16-hour flight from Singapore to London, it is the difference between arriving rested and arriving functional.
The Nuage seat — exclusive to Bombardier — is widely considered the finest piece of furniture ever installed in a business aircraft. Its cradle motion and lateral support eliminate the muscular fatigue that longer flights produce in conventional seating.
Range: 7,700 nautical miles — fractionally more than the G700, sufficient for city-pair combinations the G700 cannot serve non-stop.
The Dassault Falcon 10X: European Precision in the Ultra-Long-Range Category
The Falcon 10X represents a different tradition. Where Gulfstream and Bombardier are North American in their design sensibility — confident, open, luminous — the Falcon 10X is European: precise, refined, and characterized by a width (2.58 meters, marginally wider than the G700) that feels calm rather than dramatic.
The 10X is powered by Rolls-Royce Pearl 10X engines and offers range of 7,500 nautical miles. Its cabin design reflects Dassault’s French aerospace heritage — ergonomically precise, acoustically controlled, and finished to a standard that rivals the finest European interior design rather than the aerospace industry’s interpretation of it.
The Verdict
For maximum cabin light, social configuration, and American design sensibility: the G700.
For the most private long-haul sleep experience and architectural room separation: the Global 7500.
For European design refinement and the widest available cross-section: the Falcon 10X.
All three are available through Hype Luxury’s global operator network — and the right choice depends entirely on how you actually use the journey.





