The Billionaire Jewellery Card by Jacob & Co. sets a new benchmark in luxury, blending diamonds, exclusivity, and elite privileges like never before.
It’s not every day you witness the birth of a new status symbol. But on a warm May evening in Dubai, inside a velvet-draped lounge scented with aged cigars and legacy, that’s precisely what happened. Jacob & Co., in partnership with Insignia, unveiled something that feels more like an heirloom than a credit card, the Billionaire Jewellery Card.
Presented at NAHATÉ Dubai, an elite, members-only destination tucked discreetly within the Capital Club, the card’s unveiling was equal parts spectacle and subtlety. It was a moment that encapsulated what modern luxury is becoming: not louder, but rarer. Not mass, but meticulous. And most importantly, not just bought, but earned.
The Card That Outshines Every Other
Let’s begin with the card itself. Priced at $100,000, the Billionaire Jewellery Card is limited to just four pieces worldwide. Yes, four. Crafted by the master jewellers at Jacob & Co., the card is set with diamonds and is, in fact, the only Visa card in the world legally permitted to incorporate precious stones into its design.
What might sound like extravagance for extravagance’s sake is, in practice, a triumph of craft. This isn’t a gimmick; it’s a tactile extension of Jacob & Co.’s design DNA, bold, unapologetic, and beautifully excessive. A metal rectangle transformed into a statement piece.
And for those who prefer discretion over dazzle, there’s the Billionaire Black Card. Limited to 150 units, it’s sleek, heavy in the hand, and elegant in a way that doesn’t need explanation. Where the Jewellery Card shouts quietly, the Black Card simply nods.
A Guest List as Curated as the Card
Only 40 people were invited to the event, personally selected by Jacob Arabo himself.
Among them: financiers, architects, global entrepreneurs, and a smattering of cultural icons. It was a gathering less about numbers and more about nuance.
The venue, NAHATÉ’s Jacob & Co. Cigar Lounge, is already a whispered legend among the Dubai set.
The world’s only one of its kind, it’s a plush, dimly lit space layered in velvet and stocked with curated timepieces and rare cigars.
For this occasion, guests were served Cohiba cigars aged over five years in French cognac barrels.
The drinks menu didn’t disappoint either, Dom Pérignon P2 2006, the Basquiat collaboration edition, and Hennessy Richard poured freely, not for the sake of excess, but of experience.
It wasn’t a product launch. It was a story being told in real time.
What Comes With a Card Like This?
Unsurprisingly, the benefits attached to the Billionaire Jewellery Card and its Black Card sibling are as elite as the design itself. Cardholders receive 24/7 access to a personal assistant and lifestyle manager, multi-currency support (USD, EUR, GBP, CHF), comprehensive travel insurance, and everything from airport lounge access to a dedicated jet programme.
There’s also access to Insignia’s Private Jet Programme, a handpicked hotel collection, a wine club, and even a bespoke e-commerce platform called The Voice of Luxury. Every element of the card has been conceived with one audience in mind: those who have everything and want it done better.
Even trusted staff or close family members can be catered for: two complimentary secondary cards are offered for each primary account.
Why NAHATÉ Made Sense
Some venues are chosen for convenience. NAHATÉ was chosen for alignment. Spread across the third floor of the Capital Club, it’s a family-run restaurant and club that’s quietly rewriting the rules of high-end hospitality in Dubai. There’s a central dining room with Baccarat’s Chef’s Table, two ultra-private salons (including the cigar lounge), and a nightlife programme that transforms the space from Thursday to Saturday.
It’s elegant without being flashy, cool without trying. In short, it’s the kind of place the Billionaire Jewellery Card would likely be used.
“We curate moments that transcend the ordinary,” said Sam Florentsev, Co-Founder of NAHATÉ. “Partnering with Insignia and Jacob & Co. was a natural fit. The evening wasn’t just about luxury, it was about the intersection of art, design, and experience.”
Jacob Arabo: From Apprentice to Architect of Excess
The man behind the glittering curtain, Jacob Arabo, has always been something of a maverick. Born in Uzbekistan, he moved to the United States at 14, dropped out of school at 16 to become a jewellery apprentice, and launched his own workshop by 21.
By the late ’90s, he’d turned Jacob & Co. into a favourite among the elite, creating men’s jewellery for stars like Elton John, Rihanna, and Madonna. Then came the watches: the Five Time Zone in 2002, and later, the Quenttin Tourbillon, featuring the world’s first vertical tourbillon and a power reserve of 31 days.
His work is often described as “excessive,” but that misses the point. What Arabo really does is challenge taste itself. The Billionaire Jewellery Card is just the latest in a long line of innovations that ask: what if luxury had no ceiling?
Not Just a Card, But a Marker
What sets the Billionaire Jewellery Card apart isn’t just its materials or price point. It’s what it represents: access, attention, and a level of refinement that can’t be mass-produced.
Owning one is less about what you can buy and more about what you can be invited to. What rooms you’ll be in. What conversations you’ll have. What experiences you’ll be offered before they ever reach the market.
It’s finance, yes, but it’s also fashion, art, and community. And perhaps that’s the future of banking: not a service, but a lifestyle.





