Redefining the Skies of Privilege
At 51,000 feet above the earth, silence reigns broken only by the whisper of precision-engineered air.
This is the realm of the Dassault Falcon 10X, a $75 million expression of how far private aviation has come and how intimately it can serve those who live without limits.

The Falcon 10X is not a jet. It is an airborne residence, a penthouse of motion designed for the modern elite. Each flight blurs the line between mobility and lifestyle, a sanctuary for those who command global empires and measure their days not in hours, but in experiences.
With a range of 7,500 nautical miles, the 10X links New York to Hong Kong or London to Santiago nonstop. It offers the largest cabin in its class, nearly 9 feet wide, and a sense of spatial harmony that rivals the interiors of Mayfair apartments or Saint-Tropez villas.
The Architecture of Altitude
Dassault’s lineage in both aerospace engineering and artisanal design culminates here.
The 10X’s composite wing flexes like a living structure, optimizing lift while whispering through turbulence. Twin Rolls-Royce Pearl 10X engines deliver power and poise in perfect balance, burning quieter, cleaner, and with commanding thrust.


Inside, the cabin becomes an art installation of comfort.
Designers describe it as “the quietest, brightest, most adaptable interior in the sky.”
Its modular floor plan allows complete personalization from a full king-size suite with a shower and dressing room to a cinema lounge with projection and chaise seating.
The windows 38% larger than previous Falcon models, framing the world as a living painting.
Cabin altitude remains at just 3,000 feet, even when cruising above Everest’s peaks, ensuring travelers arrive refreshed and unburdened by the fatigue of distance.
Technology Disappearing into Elegance
What separates the Falcon 10X isn’t just luxury it’s discretion.
The avionics suite, derived from Dassault’s fighter jet division, integrates AI-driven safety, flight path optimization, and predictive maintenance. Yet, passengers never see it. They simply feel the seamless ease of an aircraft that seems to anticipate their desires.


Mood lighting adjusts with circadian rhythm; cabin air renews every two minutes; sound insulation absorbs conversation into privacy. Every element, visible or hidden, exists to restore calm and command.
The Future of Private Travel
The Falcon 10X enters service in 2027, but its order book already reads like a roll call of private dynasties, tech titans, and sovereign families.
It is, unmistakably, a statement of vision, proof that flight can be not just fast, but profoundly human.
As the ultra-wealthy turn toward aviation that reflects their environmental awareness and lifestyle expectations, Dassault’s mastery of aerospace artistry positions the Falcon 10X not as a competitor, but as the benchmark.
This is not about getting there first. It’s about arriving without having left luxury behind.



