Group travel is a logistics problem pretending to be a vacation — four hotels, forty bags, one boarding window. One organizer books it, one dispatcher sequences every pickup, each family gets its own chauffeur text, and the whole party walks up the gangway together. Per-vehicle fares locked upfront, from SUVs to 14-passenger Sprinters to coordinated convoys of 55.
Group transportation from SeaTac Airport Transportation moves parties of 4 to 55 across Seattle, SeaTac, and Washington State — cruise groups to Pier 66 and Pier 91, family reunion sailings, wedding cruises, milestone celebrations, club outings, corporate incentive groups, and team travel. One organizer books the entire move on per-vehicle fares locked upfront; one dispatcher sequences multi-hotel pickups, stages luggage capacity to the manifest, and stays the single point of contact from first pickup to final drop. Terminal details, pier fares, and the sailing-day timing guide live on the Cruise hub.
Three generations, five households, one ship. Grandparents ride up front, car seats installed in back, nobody navigates.
Sailaway parties and wedding-at-sea groups — the party arrives together, dressed, photographed, and on time for boarding.
The 50th anniversary cruise, the 60th birthday sailing — booked by one adult child, enjoyed by everyone else.
Church groups, garden clubs, alumni sailings — a Sprinter or convoy with one invoice the treasurer will actually like.
Incentive cruises and company celebrations on the corporate account — Net-30, consolidated reporting, priority dispatch.
Tournament squads, conference cohorts, and tour groups landing at SEA — met, loaded, and moved as one unit.
Cruise travelers average two bags each, and that is the number that actually sizes the vehicle — fourteen people is a Sprinter, but fourteen people with twenty-eight suitcases is a Sprinter loaded by someone who knew that in advance. Give dispatch the headcount and the bag count, and the right capacity is staged: seats for everyone, cargo for everything, and a second vehicle for luggage overflow when the math demands one. One fare per vehicle, everything locked before booking.
Every group has one person doing the herding — collecting flight numbers, fielding the group chat, absorbing the blame. This service exists to shrink that job to a single phone call. You hand dispatch the manifest; dispatch hands back a timed plan where every sub-party gets its own confirmation and chauffeur text, and you get one number to call all day instead of a group chat on fire.
Vehicles are assigned the night before — drivers briefed on the manifest, car seats installed, cargo space matched to the bag count, convoy order set.
Each hotel and household gets its window; each sub-party gets its own chauffeur text. The dispatcher watches every vehicle and closes gaps in real time.
The convoy reaches the pier or venue together — grandparents to guest of honor — and the return trip is already staged for debark morning or last dance.
Count bags, not just seats — cruise travelers average two each. 4–6 people: Luxury SUV. 7–10: Transit van. 11–14: Sprinter. 15+: convoy. Dispatch stages the capacity, including overflow cargo when needed.
Yes — one organizer, one locked quote, one payment. Each family still gets its own pickup details and chauffeur text, so you are not forwarding messages all week.
Yes — dispatch sequences multi-hotel pickups into one timed plan: each stop gets a window, each sub-party its own confirmation, and the group arrives together.
Either. One Sprinter keeps fourteen together; convoys move as a unit; and groups that want to split — early boarders vs late sleepers — get separately timed vehicles under the same booking.
Tell dispatch — the plan is re-quoted and re-locked before anything changes. Free changes and cancellation up to 24 hours before pickup; group plans are best final 48 hours out.
48–72 hours for single-vehicle groups, 1–2 weeks for convoys, and earlier for July–August cruise Saturdays, when Sprinters sell out first.
Per vehicle, always — one locked fare covers everyone aboard and every bag. One Sprinter fare split fourteen ways is the group economics.
Yes — infant, convertible, and booster seats meeting WA standards are a paid add-on in any class, installed and safety-checked before pickup. Note ages at booking.
Constantly — teams, tournaments, conference cohorts, tour groups, reunions, and long-distance runs like Leavenworth day trips, on the same per-vehicle, one-dispatcher model.
On the Cruise hub — both terminals, the route fare board, and the boarding and disembark timing guide. This page owns the group logistics.
Four to fifty-five, one organizer, one locked quote — cruise days and everywhere else.