If you are serious about private aviation — as an owner, a charter client, or an investor — this is the comparison that matters most. The Gulfstream G700 and the Bombardier Global 7500 are the two finest purpose-built business jets on earth. Both cost approximately $75–80 million. Both fly non-stop between virtually any two cities on the planet. Both have rendered everything below them slightly irrelevant.
But they are not the same aircraft. And for the right buyer, the difference is everything.
The Gulfstream G700 Gulfstream’s flagship is a masterpiece of American engineering confidence. The cabin is the widest in its class — 2.56 meters — with full stand-up height throughout. Seventeen panoramic oval windows flood the interior with natural light. The G700 can be configured with up to five distinct living areas: a forward club suite, a conference area, a dining zone, a master suite, and a dedicated crew rest area.
Range: 7,500 nautical miles. New York to Singapore non-stop. London to Perth non-stop. The G700’s Rolls-Royce Pearl 700 engines are the quietest ever installed on a business aircraft.
The Bombardier Global 7500 Bombardier’s answer is more architectural than the Gulfstream. Four true living spaces — not zones, rooms — including the only full-size kitchen and the only dedicated master suite with a flat bed that doesn’t require the seats to convert. The bespoke Nuage seat is widely considered the finest piece of furniture ever installed in a business aircraft.
Range: 7,700 nautical miles — fractionally more than the G700. The Global 7500 is also marginally faster at Mach 0.925 versus the G700’s Mach 0.925. Effectively identical.
The Verdict Choose the G700 if you value light, openness, and the connected feeling of a space that flows. Choose the Global 7500 if you want rooms — genuine architectural separation between sleeping, working, dining, and gathering.
Both are available for charter through Hype Luxury’s global fleet. Both will change your understanding of what travel can be.w





