The Journal
Two columns. The Register ranks the real car services an executive can keep on account in New York. The Desk Notes cover the money and etiquette of riding well — gratuity, billing, and choosing the right car.
Ranked, for the daily rider
The Best Executive Car Services in NYC (2026)
Six chauffeured houses an individual executive can keep on standing account in New York — ranked for the daily rider, not the one-off charter.
Read →The Register · 7 minThe Best On-Account Car Services in NYC (2026)
For the executive who never wants to see a card reader: six New York houses that bill to a personal or corporate account and reconcile monthly.
Read →The Register · 7 minThe Best Hourly Chauffeur Services in NYC (2026)
When the day is a string of meetings rather than a single ride: six houses for as-directed, by-the-hour executive work.
Read →On money, timing & etiquette
How Much to Tip a Chauffeur: An Executive’s Etiquette Guide
The standard is 18–20% — but on what, exactly, and what happens when gratuity is already on the invoice. The short, correct version.
Read →The Desk Note · 6 minOn Account: How Executive Car Billing Actually Works
What a personal car account is, how a monthly statement is built, and why it beats a card at the curb for the daily rider.
Read →The Desk Note · 5 minSedan or SUV: Choosing the Right Executive Car
The honest decision tree for the daily rider — when the sedan is right, when the SUV earns its keep, and when neither is the answer.
Read →The Desk Note · 6 minExecutive Car vs. Rideshare: What the Daily Rider Is Actually Buying
Beyond the per-ride price, the real comparison is continuity, accountability and discretion. Where each genuinely wins.
Read →