While private air travel remains the most comfortable and efficient way to get from point A to point B, today's private jets have evolved into flying five-star hotels, complete with bespoke interiors and every imaginable amenity. From one-off exterior color schemes to cabins layered in luxurious materials like cashmere, personalizing a private jet now mirrors the process of configuring a multi-million dollar hypercar, where virtually nothing is off limits. Bombardier is bringing the world of haute couture to private aviation with its newest collaboration with Lebanese fashion designer ELIE SAAB, customizing a Global 8000 with an interior inspired by the fashion house's signature design language.
Starting life as Bombardier’s flagship and the world’s fastest business jet, the Global 8000 ELIE SAAB edition entered service in December 2025, as part of an extensive redesign to transform the cabin into a space as if it were Saab’s own home in the sky. Saab approached the project exactly the way you'd expect from someone who has styled Beyoncé, Angelina Jolie, and Halle Berry, with serious attention to detail and zero tolerance for anything that feels generic.
The cabin is built around three distinct zones, with a central family-oriented space that breaks from the traditional row-seat aviation layout. Warm colors set the tone, while rich fabrics, high-quality materials, and a carefully selected marble tied together the ultra-luxury look and feel. A wood bird motif, symbolizing freedom and movement, finds its way throughout the interior while remaining subtle in some sense.
Saab's designers pushed Bombardier well outside their usual comfort zone, introducing ideas around materials and a fashion-driven philosophy that the aviation world hadn't seen before. Bombardier's engineers, in turn, had to certify and validate every single creative choice for a jet built to fly long-hauls daily. Bombardier’s Global 8000 ELIE SAAB edition reinforces the idea that time spent at 40,000 feet shouldn’t be limited to a cramped cabin and assigned seats. 
Source: Bombardier