Nigerian Grammy Award-winning superstar Damini Ebunoluwa Ogulu, known globally as Burna Boy, has once again made headlines for his taste in exotic automobiles, this time with a custom Bugatti Chiron reportedly worth millions of dollars.
The vehicle is the product of a partnership with Venuum, a Dubai-based luxury car customization house also operating under the name Venuum Black. The shop confirmed via Instagram that it is building a bespoke, carbon-fiber widebody kit specifically for the Afrobeats star, a project it describes as a “one-of-one” creation.
If completed as announced, the car would carry a double distinction: the first Bugatti Chiron ever brought into Nigeria, and, according to Venuum, the first widebody conversion ever performed on a Chiron anywhere in the world.
Given the Chiron’s status as one of the most exclusive and heavily engineered hypercars on the planet, a claim like this, if verified, would represent a significant technical undertaking, since modifying the aerodynamics and bodywork of a car built to Bugatti’s exacting specifications is no small feat.
Venuum’s announcement included a video showing Burna Boy alongside members of its design team, with the caption capturing the ambition behind the build: the company called it “a fully bespoke vision, designed from scratch,” and promised a reveal “in just a few weeks.”
The tone of the post, equal parts pride and theatrical anticipation, suggests Venuum is positioning this as a flagship project heading into 2026, one meant to cement its reputation in the ultra-luxury customization space.
The singer’s own social media activity foreshadowed the project. In an earlier post, Burna Boy described his wish list in strikingly specific terms, asking for a one-of-one Chiron featuring diamonds worked into both the car and its key holder, a detail that, if accurate, would push the final cost well beyond the base price of the vehicle itself.
That question of cost has already become a point of contention. An Abuja-based car dealer operating under the handle @abujacar first estimated the customized Bugatti’s value at ₦2 billion, only to later revise that figure sharply upward to ₦9 billion, without publicly explaining the basis for the change.
The inconsistency has fueled skepticism online about how firm any pricing details actually are at this stage. For context, industry reports place the standard retail price of a Bugatti Chiron between $3.5 million and upwards of $5 million, depending on trim level, rarity, and customization, meaning the widebody modifications, diamond detailing, and one-of-one branding could add substantially to that baseline.
Notably, as of this report, neither Burna Boy nor Venuum has released footage or images confirming that the car has actually been delivered. The reveal, for now, remains a matter of announcement rather than documented fact, a gap that has left room for speculation about both the timeline and the final specifications of the build.
Should the project reach completion as described, it would slot into an already formidable collection. Burna Boy’s garage reportedly includes a Lamborghini Revuelto and a Rolls-Royce Spectre, placing the Chiron among a small class of vehicles that few individuals, let alone musicians, possess anywhere in the world.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Burna Boy is reportedly getting a one-of-one, diamond-detailed Bugatti Chiron widebody from Dubai’s Venuum, a build being billed as a world and Nigerian first. But beyond the flashy Instagram teasers, nothing is actually confirmed: no delivery photos, no verified price (estimates swung wildly from ₦2 billion to ₦9 billion with zero explanation), and no official reveal yet.













