The first thing you notice is the quiet. Not the highway humming beneath the chassis, not the murmur of a venue load-out. Only the hush of a luxury hotel suite on wheels.
Parade spent a night in a coach once used by Nick Jonas on a Jonas Brothers tour, among others, and the set-up was basically down to a science: blackout shades, climate control zoned to the bunks, soft-close cabinetry, a galley stocked to the rider, and a lounge designed for legs-up recovery between cities.
You get why artists call this home after 20,000 miles, but the surprise is how attainable that life actually is to everyday families — be it for a weekend getaway, a bachelorette party, or a tailgate. This isn’t just rock-star fantasy anymore.
Inside a Dreamliner Motor Coach
The bedroom of one of Dreamliner’s many Star Buses. (Zeke Ruelas)
The main sitting area, with a full kitchen, on Dreamliner’s Star Buses. (Zeke Ruelas)
Dreamliner’s custom layouts are drawn in Nashville and tailored to each client — from 12-bunk band rigs to star buses with a private bedroom, vanity, steamer wardrobe, and a second lounge that doubles as a mini writers’ room.
The most interesting part is that personal drivers are part of the package. They live for the overnight haul and keep a professional distance from talent. In fact, they’re the ones who should get the credit for keeping the tour on time!
Capacity: up to 12 bunks max.
Build: bespoke interiors, acoustic treatment, routed power/wifi for work and gaming.
Service: all-inclusive drivers trained for back-to-back city moves.
Discretion: crews are hired to move guests — not mingle. Drivers are trained to keep schedules tight and details private. Confidentiality is non-negotiable.
And yes, scale matters. On Beyoncé’s Renaissance run, her caravan tapped 28 Dreamliner coaches, according to Dreamliner reps. Zach Bryan bought his own. For his part, country star Kenny Chesney maintains a uniquely customized coach that Dreamliner parks and preps on demand.
How a Pandemic Bet Became the Biggest Player in the World
In late 2020, with touring flatlined, founder Rich Thomson bought 12 idle coaches, wagering that live music would roar back. It did.
By 2022, its acquisition of Diamond Coach Leasing more than doubled the fleet and cemented a Nashville HQ, with additional facilities in Denver, Colo., Rock Lititz, Penn., and Fontana, Calif.
That expansion continued in later years, nearly quadrupling its capacity to roughly 300 coaches. That’s enough to not only service half of large arena/stadium tours in the U.S., but also cover motion pictures, festivals, and mobile marketing.
Today the client list ranges from Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Elton John, Drake, Olivia Rodrigo, Billie Eilish, The Weeknd, Metallica, Coldplay, Kenny Chesney, and Chris Stapleton to Fortune 500 executive travel.
An Uber for Luxury Coaches?
“I want people to step off our buses feeling relaxed and cared for, thinking, ‘That was something special, so comfortable I could live in it — maybe even nicer than my apartment in the city,” Thomson told Parade.
In our interview, the founder outlined a playbook that pushes well beyond concerts.
“Partnerships with major brands, corporations, corporate activations, festivals, and marketing agencies,” he explained, stressing that there’s a “huge opportunity to reach new audiences who don’t yet realize they can lease our buses for weekends, weeks, or even months — for personal travel, vacations, family trips, or corporate getaways.”
Inside the main quarters of one of Dreamliner’s Executive Coaches. (Zeke Ruelas)
Why Road Time Hits Different
Thomson is a true believer in the miles: “I regularly use coaches for family trips, whether it’s a winter vacation in Vail, Colo., road trips with my wife and kids, or traveling with the kids’ sports teams [ice hockey, volleyball, soccer, cheerleading, etc.],” he said.
The founder was quick to note that he’s taken his wife on weekend getaways and joined friends annually for SEC football games — tailgates included! Trips to destinations like Zion and Yellowstone were also on the itinerary.
“The options are truly limitless for enjoying road trips and exploring places across the U.S.,” said Thomson. “No car, sprinter van, or plane can replicate the experience and quality time spent with friends, family, and colleagues on a Dreamliner.”
Living Like a Headliner (Yes, Really)
The most surprising part of sleeping on a star bus is how normal it feels by morning. You wake where the day starts — arena, festival grounds, film set — without a TSA checkpoint or rental counter in sight.
With rates around $5,000 – $7,500 a day, Dreamliner’s wheels now cover far more than music, especially when costs are split among a group.
The best part? No matter where you are in the U.S., Dreamliner will drive to you! Having seen its state-of-the-art technology — equipped with a GPS system that is able to locate every bus on the fleet at all times, no matter where they are on the road — it’s nothing for them to send one of its 300 CDL-certified drivers to your pickup and drop-off location.
Simply put, the headliner lifestyle isn’t just for headliners anymore. It’s idling at the curb, ready to go wheels up the moment you are.
This story was originally reported by Parade on Sep 15, 2025, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.yahoo.com ’














