Cherry Hill sits at the intersection of two major interstates in southern New Jersey, positioning it as both a corporate center and a residential gateway to Philadelphia. Business travelers pass through regularly for meetings with firms along the Route 70 corridor. Families use it as a staging point for East Coast travel. Three airports serve the area, each offering different route networks and terminal configurations. Bookinglane's airport transfer service operates across all three: private sedans, SUVs, and Sprinter Vans driven by professional chauffeurs who track your flight in real time and adjust pickup without requiring a phone call.
Three Airports Within Range
Philadelphia International Airport (PHL)
Roughly 12 miles northwest of Cherry Hill's center, PHL handles international connections and domestic trunk routes. Drive time runs 20 to 30 minutes depending on which terminal you're using and whether you're traveling during the I-676 morning surge. The airport splits into seven terminals, and knowing your airline's specific gate area matters when coordinating curbside pickup. Most Cherry Hill travelers use PHL as their primary departure point.
Atlantic City International Airport (ACY)
This facility sits about 35 miles southeast, a 40- to 50-minute drive through the Pine Barrens on the Atlantic City Expressway. ACY operates as a smaller alternative with limited carrier service, primarily Spirit Airlines. The single-terminal layout simplifies pickup logistics. Travelers headed to beach properties often route through here during summer months, and reverse-direction corporate travelers use it to skip the PHL crowds.
Trenton-Mercer Airport (TTN)
Located approximately 40 miles north, TTN requires 45 to 55 minutes via I-295. Frontier Airlines dominates the carrier mix, offering select leisure routes. The airport's compact footprint means shorter walks from curb to gate, which appeals to travelers who prioritize efficiency over route variety. Construction along the I-295 corridor occasionally extends drive times during weekday mornings.
All drive times are approximate and assume normal traffic conditions. Actual travel time may vary depending on time of day, road work, and seasonal congestion.
How an Airport Pickup Actually Works
Your chauffeur begins tracking your inbound flight two hours before scheduled landing. If air traffic control holds your plane or if you touch down early, pickup adjusts automatically. No text thread required. After you clear baggage claim, the chauffeur waits in the arrivals hall holding a name board with your last name printed in clean block letters. You received the exact meeting-point instructions—terminal number, baggage carousel area, which set of automatic doors—before your wheels touched the runway. Complimentary waiting time is included for airport pickups. The chauffeur loads your luggage, confirms your destination address, and pulls away from the curb while you settle into the back seat.
Matching Vehicle to Luggage Reality
A Premium Sedan accommodates up to 2 passengers and works for the solo business traveler carrying a roller bag and a laptop case. The trunk handles two carry-ons comfortably but starts to struggle with multiple checked bags. Premium SUVs seat up to 6 passengers and solve the family problem: a week's worth of checked luggage, car seats if needed, and the shopping bags acquired during the trip all fit without Tetris-level packing. For corporate teams or extended families, Sprinter Vans carry up to 12 passengers (select configurations handle up to 14) and swallow an entire group's gear without forcing anyone to hold a duffel on their lap. Vehicle availability varies by market. Choose based on actual head count and the honest luggage load, not aspirational packing discipline.
Four Details That Prevent Airport Chaos
Add your flight number when you book. That single data point allows automatic tracking and eliminates the need to notify anyone if your departure city imposes a ground delay. Peak traffic affects drive time to all three airports, though the patterns differ. PHL pickups scheduled for 7:30 AM departures require buffer time for the Route 70 commuter flow and the I-676 backups near the Ben Franklin Bridge approach. Afternoon returns from business trips often land during the 4:00 to 6:00 PM departure window, when outbound airport traffic compounds the return drive. Book at least 24 hours ahead for standard trips; three to five days provides better vehicle selection during holiday travel periods. If you're landing at PHL and your flight uses one of the outer terminals, confirm the pickup instructions specify your actual terminal—the campus sprawls, and meeting at Terminal A when your bag arrives at Terminal F adds unnecessary walking with luggage.
Two Minutes to Reserve a Ride
Enter your Cherry Hill pickup address—your home on Kresson Road, your office in the Woodcrest Corporate Center, your hotel near the Route 38 retail corridor—and select your destination airport. Available vehicles appear with upfront pricing displayed for each class. Select the one that matches your group size and luggage count. Confirm the reservation. A chauffeur is assigned to your trip, and you receive confirmation with contact details and pickup instructions. The entire process takes less time than finding airport parking rates on a terminal website. Pricing is transparent and confirmed before you book—no surge multipliers, no post-trip recalculations. If you're catching an early morning flight out of PHL and need a 4:45 AM pickup from your Cherry Hill home, the rate you see at booking is the rate you pay.
Simpler Than Driving Yourself
Airport transfers remove the decision fatigue that precedes every trip: economy lot versus hourly garage, whether to risk the daily lot filling up, how much cash to carry for parking payment. Check availability and pricing for your next Cherry Hill airport run. Enter your flight details, see your vehicle options, and confirm. Your chauffeur tracks the flight, meets you at arrivals, and gets you home while you answer the emails that piled up mid-flight.
John Smith