May 20, 2026
The Case for the Ghost
Rolls-Royce calls the Ghost "post opulent." It is a specific position: beyond the exhausting accumulation of the Phantom, and above the conventional executive sedan. The Ghost is the vehicle chosen by principals who have already moved past the need to signal wealth — who have nothing to prove and everything to protect: their time, their privacy, their concentration. For these clients, the Ghost is the correct instrument.
Technical Excellence
The current Ghost generation is built around an all-new spaceframe architecture — an aluminum space-frame chassis that Rolls-Royce engineered from scratch, the first in their history. The result is a vehicle that absorbs road surface as a supine state rather than a filtered one. The Planar suspension system adds a second layer of movement absorption above the air springs, addressing the high-frequency road surface information that conventional suspension transmits to the cabin. The Ghost's cabin is not quiet by comparison to a luxury vehicle — it is quiet by comparison to a high-specification recording studio.
The Illuminated Fascia
Inside, the Ghost's defining element is the Illuminated Fascia: the dashboard surface behind which 152 stars form the Rolls-Royce constellation, incorporating 5,500 fiber optic elements illuminated through the paneling. This is not a feature — it is a statement about where the marque places the boundary between engineering and art. Our chauffeurs are briefed to enable this on evening engagements unless the principal requests otherwise.
Ghost in FFGR's American Fleet
FFGR USA operates the Rolls-Royce Ghost in New York, Los Angeles, and Miami as the primary chauffeur vehicle for principals who prefer the Ghost's profile over the Phantom's. For airport transfers requiring discretion, the Ghost in Obsidian or Gunmetal finish is our recommendation: it is recognizable to those who know, invisible to those who don't. Available for hourly hire from $420/hour, full-day from $2,800, and airport transfer from $320 from JFK.



