Four Teams, One City, Zero Parking Stress
Atlanta is one of a handful of American cities where four major professional sports teams play within a fifteen-mile radius. The Falcons and Atlanta United share Mercedes-Benz Stadium in the heart of Downtown. The Hawks compete at State Farm Arena, directly next door. And the Braves occupy Truist Park in the Battery, a purpose-built entertainment district in Cobb County that has redefined what a ballpark neighborhood can be.
What all four venues share, beyond the roar of seventy thousand combined seats, is a parking situation that tests the patience of even the most devoted fan. Stadium lots charge $40 to $60 per vehicle. Surge-priced rideshares after a Falcons game can reach three times the normal rate. And the post-event traffic — particularly at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where the interstate on-ramps were designed for a city half Atlanta's current size — turns a ten-minute drive into a forty-five-minute crawl.
There is an alternative that eliminates all of it and adds something no parking pass ever could: a pregame, in the Sprinter, on a 4K screen.
Pregame in the Cabin
The game day experience begins the moment your group boards the Sprinter — and that is not metaphor. The 32-inch Samsung 4K Smart TV connects to Apple TV, which means every pregame show, every analyst prediction, every highlight reel is playing on a proper screen while your chauffeur handles the route to the stadium. The premium surround sound fills the cabin. Someone opens the refrigerator and passes chilled drinks. The captain's chairs recline.
By the time the Sprinter pulls to the curb outside Mercedes-Benz Stadium or State Farm Arena, your group has already been in game mode for thirty minutes. The tailgate happened in cream leather, climate-controlled comfort, with a sound system that outperforms the average sports bar — and nobody had to set up a folding table in a parking lot.
What the screen delivers on game day
- Pregame coverage: ESPN, Fox Sports, NFL Network, NBA TV — stream the broadcast your group follows while en route to the venue
- Fantasy lineup checks: Cast your phone to the 4K screen and make last-minute roster decisions as a group, not hunched over a six-inch display
- Postgame highlights: On the ride home, watch the plays you missed while in line for concessions. Relive the fourth-quarter comeback in 4K while traffic sorts itself out around you
- Out-of-town games: When your team is on the road, the Sprinter becomes the watch party — eight guests, a private cabin, and a screen that makes every away game feel closer
The Parking Math: $40-$60 You Keep
Stadium parking in Atlanta is not a convenience fee. It is a tax on driving yourself. At Mercedes-Benz Stadium, official lots range from $40 for surface parking to $60 for premium garage spots — and that is before the twenty-minute walk from the lot to the gate. At Truist Park, the Battery's garages charge $20 to $40 depending on the event, with premium spots closer to $60 during Braves playoff games.
A Sprinter drops you at the venue entrance. No lot, no walk, no fee. That $40 to $60 stays in your pocket — or, more accurately, it offsets a meaningful portion of the Sprinter's rate.
No Surge Pricing After the Final Whistle
The most expensive rideshare of the year is not during rush hour. It is the fifteen minutes after a major event lets out. When seventy-two thousand fans pour out of Mercedes-Benz Stadium after a Falcons game, rideshare algorithms respond exactly as designed: they multiply. A $20 ride becomes $55. A $30 ride becomes $75. And the wait time — the real cost — stretches to twenty, thirty, sometimes forty minutes while you stand on a sidewalk with thousands of other people staring at the same spinning wheel on the same app.
Your Sprinter chauffeur is not in that queue. The vehicle is already staged in a pre-arranged position, coordinated with venue pickup protocols, ready to collect your group the moment you walk out. The rate you confirmed at booking is the rate you pay. The surge is someone else's problem.
Group Economics: $22 Per Guest
The perception that a private Sprinter is extravagant does not survive contact with basic division. For a group of eight guests sharing a game day Sprinter — pickup, stadium drop-off, postgame collection, and return — the per-person cost works out to approximately $22. That is less than parking. Less than two surge-priced rideshares split among four. Less than the Uber that never comes after the fourth quarter.
For a group of six, the per-person cost rises modestly but remains well below the combined alternative of parking, rideshares, and the intangible cost of forty-five minutes spent not celebrating because you are standing in a rideshare queue.
Venue by Venue: What to Know
Mercedes-Benz Stadium — Falcons & Atlanta United
The 71,000-seat retractable-roof stadium anchors the Westside of Downtown. Drop-off on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive or Northside Drive puts your group steps from the gates. Your chauffeur stages along the GWCC perimeter during the game and repositions as the event winds down. For FIFA World Cup 2026 matches — when Atlanta hosts some of the tournament's most anticipated games — early booking is not a suggestion. It is the only way to guarantee availability.
State Farm Arena — Hawks
Directly adjacent to Mercedes-Benz Stadium, State Farm Arena hosts Hawks games, concerts, and special events in a 16,600-seat configuration. The arena's Centennial Olympic Park entrance is the most efficient drop-off point. For groups combining a Hawks game with dinner in Midtown afterward, hourly charter service keeps the Sprinter available for the full evening.
Truist Park — Braves
The Braves' home in the Battery Atlanta offers a unique proposition: the entertainment district surrounding the park means pregame and postgame activities are steps from the gates rather than a drive away. The Sprinter drops your group at the Battery's main entrance, and the chauffeur stages in a nearby position until you are ready to depart. For groups that want to explore the Battery's restaurants and bars after the game, hourly service lets the evening extend naturally.
Atlanta Hawks Practice Facility & Other Venues
Beyond the major stadiums, Atlanta's sports calendar includes college football at Bobby Dodd Stadium (Georgia Tech), SEC Championship games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, and Peach Bowl matchups that draw fans from across the Southeast. The Sprinter serves all of them with the same protocol: drop-off at the gate, staging during the event, and collection when you are ready.
The Postgame Advantage
The game ends. Your group walks out together. The Sprinter is waiting — not somewhere in a lot, not circling the block, not subject to a surge algorithm. You board, settle in, and the postgame conversation continues in the same cabin where the pregame began. The 4K screen shows the highlights you want to see again. The sound system delivers the postgame analysis. And the forty-five-minute crawl out of the stadium district? Your chauffeur handles it while you handle the post-victory celebration — or the post-defeat analysis, which is equally important and equally deserving of cream leather and proper sound.
No one drives home tired. No one navigates unfamiliar streets. No one pays surge pricing. The evening has a single logistical thread, and it belongs to the chauffeur, not to you.
Frequently Asked Questions
How early should we book for a big game?
As soon as you have tickets. Falcons home games, Atlanta United derbies, Braves playoff dates, and Hawks marquee matchups all generate high demand for evening transportation. One vehicle means genuinely limited availability — there is no second Sprinter to dispatch if the first is committed.
Can we tailgate inside the Sprinter?
The cabin functions as a private lounge — 4K screen, surround sound, refrigerator, climate control, reclining captain's chairs. Whether that constitutes a tailgate or something considerably more refined is a matter of perspective, but the intent is the same: the pregame happens before you reach the stadium, and it happens in comfort.
Does the $22 per person estimate include the full round trip?
Yes. The per-person figure for a group of eight covers pickup from a central location, stadium drop-off, chauffeur staging during the game, postgame collection, and return to the original pickup point. It does not include optional add-ons such as child safety seats at $25 per seat.
What if the game goes to overtime?
Your chauffeur is available until you are ready to leave, regardless of how long the event runs. There is no overtime surcharge and no rebooking required. The rate covers the experience, not the clock.
Can we add dinner or drinks before or after the game?
Hourly charter service is designed for exactly this. Dinner in Buckhead before a Falcons game, the game itself, and drinks in Midtown afterward — all in one booking, one vehicle, one chauffeur. The itinerary adjusts in real time as the evening unfolds.




