Every Atlanta Braves fan knows the drill: you hit I-75 north from Midtown right as the evening commute is dissolving into game-day traffic, and somewhere around the I-285 interchange — the connector Cobb County locals simply call "the mixing bowl" — your 20-minute drive turns into 50. The parking decks at The Battery fill first-come, first-served, and the rideshare zone on Windy Ridge Parkway after the final out draws a crowd that makes surge pricing look like a polite suggestion. The single question that decides whether your group glides through all of that or gets scattered across three different parking levels is simple: does the bus drop you near the Third Base Gate, or does everyone scatter from a remote lot?

This guide answers it directly — using the Braves' own published parking information and the current 2026 plans for Truist Park and The Battery — then walks through everything else a group trip needs: which vehicle fits your crew, what the pricing looks like split across the group, and why The Battery itself is half the reason to rent a bus in the first place. Party Buses Atlanta runs game-day trips to Truist Park regularly, so what follows comes from coordinating those runs, not from a stadium brochure.

Stadium address

755 Battery Ave SE, Atlanta, GA 30339

Bus drop-off

Battery Ave near Third Base Gate / Battery Delta Deck

Bus & oversized parking

Lot 29 off Circle 75 Pkwy — permit required, advance purchase only

Rideshare zone

Windy Ridge Pkwy — long post-game waits and surge pricing

Capacity

41,147 seats

From downtown Atlanta

~10 miles · 15–20 min off-peak · 45–60 min game day

Why a Bus Changes the Entire Truist Park Experience

Truist Park sits at the intersection of I-75 and I-285 in Cobb County — 10 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta, close enough to feel accessible and busy enough on game nights to turn that 10-mile drive into a 45-minute ordeal. The Battery Atlanta, the mixed-use entertainment district wrapping around the stadium, is genuinely one of the best pre- and post-game setups in Major League Baseball. The problem is getting there and leaving.

Here's what actually happens on a sellout Friday night. Fans driving in hit the I-75/I-285 merge around 5:30 PM — the same window as the evening commute, same window as the pre-game crowd. The Braves-owned parking decks at The Battery fill before first pitch on popular dates.

The rideshare queue on Windy Ridge Parkway, the designated Uber and Lyft zone, gets long after the game ends — long enough that the Braves' own transportation page warns of extended wait times. Anyone who drove and parked in a Battery deck faces both the parking rate (up to $60 for a full evening) and a slow, managed exit from the garage.

An Atlanta Braves party bus or charter bus rental takes every one of those problems off the table. Your group boards from wherever you are — Midtown, Buckhead, Decatur, the suburbs — rides together, and steps off near the Third Base Gate with zero parking hassle and zero designated-driver math. Post-game, the bus is right there waiting when the ninth inning ends, not queued behind 12,000 other fans on Windy Ridge.

That's the trade worth making for any group that's grown past two or three cars.

Charter Bus Drop-Off & Pickup at Truist Park

Here is the specific logistics the other guides leave vague — so let's go straight to what the Braves publish.

Passenger drop-offs for buses are permitted near the Third Base Gate at the Battery Delta Deck, located off Battery Avenue. That puts your group steps from the main ballpark entrance without requiring anyone to navigate a parking structure or cross a busy surface lot. From the drop point on Battery Avenue, the Third Base Gate is right there — no long walk, no finding your section before you've found the gate.

For the bus parking permit and the bus itself: oversized vehicle parking at Truist Park is in Lot 29 off Circle 75 Parkway, and Lot 29 is served by an ADA cart that runs pickups and drop-offs at Battery Avenue near the Third Base Gate. All oversized vehicle parking is permit-based and must be purchased in advance — there is no day-of permit window at the lot. Fifteen-passenger vans run $50 per vehicle; RVs up to 35 feet run $75 per vehicle.

Permits must be secured through the Braves group representative or by calling 404-577-9100 (Option 5).

The one-line version: your bus drops your group at the Battery Delta Deck on Battery Avenue — steps from the Third Base Gate — while the bus holds in Lot 29 off Circle 75 Parkway with a pre-purchased oversized vehicle permit. That permit must be bought in advance; there is no day-of option at the gate.

Truist Park, 755 Battery Ave SE, Cumberland neighborhood of Cobb County — 10 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta at the I-75/I-285 interchange.

The Rideshare Zone: What Post-Game Actually Looks Like

The stadium's official rideshare zone — for Uber and Lyft both — is on Windy Ridge Parkway between The Battery Atlanta and Cobb Parkway, near the Third Base Gate. Lyft and Uber use a lettered sign system: A, B, C, and so on, spaced roughly 30 feet apart along Windy Ridge, so you tell your rideshare app which sign letter to meet you at. In theory, clean.

In practice, after a 41,000-seat sellout, every fan who didn't drive is heading to the same block of Windy Ridge at the same time. Wait times spike, and so do prices.

The Braves' own transportation page notes that guests may experience surge pricing or extended wait times following games and events — which is the ballpark's polite way of saying the rideshare queue after a close game can stretch a long time. A private Atlanta Braves bus rental sidesteps all of it: you arrange the pickup window before the group ever splits up, and the bus is there and ready when the final out lands, not circling Windy Ridge hoping to find your address.

Confirm the Drop-Off When You Book

Truist Park's access roads shift for high-demand dates — sellout games and major events can change how Circle 75 Parkway and Battery Avenue handle inbound bus traffic. Because the routing details move by event, our team confirms your group's exact drop point, bus parking permit, and approach route for your specific game date when you book, so you're not finding out at a closed curb. Always worth checking the official Braves parking page and any event-specific advisories before you go.

Every Way to Get to Truist Park, Compared

Atlanta isn't a public-transit city for this kind of trip. MARTA doesn't run to Cobb County, and Truist Park isn't on the rail network. Here's the honest picture for a group of 15 or more people.

Option Cost shape Arrive together? Post-game exit Best group size
Charter bus / party bus One flat rate, split by the group Yes — one vehicle, one arrival Bus waits nearby; no surge wait 15–56
Everyone drives & parks Parking up to $60/car + gas per car No — caravans split up Slow garage exit; 20–30 min extra 1–2 cars
Rideshare (Uber / Lyft) Per car each way + post-game surge No — multiple ETAs, multiple pickups Windy Ridge queue; surge pricing 1–4 per car
CobbLinc Circulator (free) Free — but runs 30-min intervals Only if you all catch the same run Post-game crowds fill the buses Small groups, no gear
MARTA + CobbLinc transfer MARTA fare + circulator transfer No — transfers split groups Depends on connections Individuals, not groups

To be straight with you: for one or two people, the CobbLinc Circulator Blue or Green lines are actually a solid call. Both routes run directly to The Battery Atlanta and Truist Park, run until 2 a.m. on game nights, and are free. No parking, no surge pricing, no stress — for a pair or a solo fan, it makes real sense.

But for a group that's grown past a couple of cars' worth of people, the coordination cost of separate vehicles tips decisively toward one bus. Different ETAs, separate parking payments, and a post-game rideshare scramble on Windy Ridge are the unavoidable costs of showing up in pieces.

The Public Transit Picture

Truist Park is not on the MARTA rail network — that's one of the original criticisms of its Cobb County location. The closest you can get by train is the MARTA Route 12 bus from Midtown Station to the Cumberland Transfer Center, then a transfer to CobbLinc or the Circulator for the final stretch. It works, but it involves two transfers, a 30-minute circulator interval, and no luggage capacity for a tailgating group with a cooler.

For a 40-person fan group with folding chairs and a bag of snacks, public transit is not the answer — a private Atlanta charter bus rental is.

The Battery Atlanta: Why It Changes the Whole Day

Truist Park is the reason you go to Cobb County. The Battery Atlanta is the reason to arrive two hours early and stay an hour after the final out. It's a 2-million-square-foot mixed-use entertainment district wrapping around the ballpark — restaurants, bars, live music, a hotel, offices, and a concert venue, all on foot from the Third Base Gate.

When your bus drops the group at Battery Avenue, the full run of The Battery is right there.

A few stops worth knowing: Antico Pizza Napoletana at The Battery draws consistent raves from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Food Network and tends to fill up in the two-hour pre-game window — reservations help. Superica pours signature margaritas alongside Tex-Mex at a volume that handles big groups comfortably. Sports & Social runs a 30-foot diagonal LED TV with a full gaming parlor — axe throwing, air hockey, a multi-sport simulator — so a group that wants to keep the energy going before first pitch doesn't have to wander.

Punch Bowl Social layers a scratch-kitchen diner with craft drinks and classic parlor games, which works well for groups who want a longer pre-game hang.

The Battery also hosts Live! at the Battery Atlanta and the Coca-Cola Roxy, both of which run their own concert and event calendars independent of the baseball schedule. On nights when a show overlaps with a Braves home game, The Battery's parking situation gets genuinely difficult — both the battery decks and the surrounding street parking feel the pressure of two simultaneous crowds. A bus handles that scenario cleanly: drop at Battery Avenue, enjoy both the game and the concert district, and let the bus sort out the post-event exit.

Check the Battery Atlanta events calendar before your visit to see what's stacked on your game night.

One practical note on Battery parking rates: The Battery decks offer two free hours on both regular and event days. After that, rates climb to $25 for two to three hours, $40 for three to four hours, and $60 for four to 24 hours. On sellout game nights, the Orange Deck is permit-only, and the remaining decks can fill before first pitch — which is the Braves' own reason for recommending prepaid parking.

A bus bypasses the deck entirely.

What Size Bus Does Your Group Need?

The right vehicle comes down to two things: headcount and what you're hauling. Not every Truist Park run looks the same — a 20-person office outing to a Wednesday afternoon game is a different trip than a 50-person fan group loading up for a Saturday night sellout with a full tailgate setup.

Vehicle Typical capacity Gear & luggage Best for Key amenities
14-passenger Sprinter limo / Sprinter van Up to ~14 Modest — coolers, a few bags Small groups, corporate outings, VIP arrivals Premium leather, USB charging, tinted windows
15–50 passenger party bus ~15–50 Onboard storage, lighter gear Fan groups who want the pregame on the ride Built-in bar, LED lighting, Bluetooth sound, flat-panel TVs
15–35 passenger minibus ~15–35 Overhead plus some underfloor Mid-size groups, corporate shuttles Powerful A/C, plush reclining seats
40–56 passenger charter bus Up to 56 Excellent — deep undercarriage bays Large fan groups, company outings, reunions Reclining seats, climate control, WiFi, power outlets, onboard restrooms, undercarriage bays

For fan groups wanting the pregame energy to start the moment the bus pulls away from the curb — built-in bar, LED lighting, sound pumping — a 15- to 50-passenger party bus rental in Atlanta is the right call. The ride from Midtown or Buckhead to Truist Park is short enough (10 to 15 miles in off-peak traffic) that the party bus is less about the road time and more about arriving already in the right mood. For larger groups or outings where everyone needs a proper seat with reclining cushion and overhead storage, a full-size charter bus covers the group with undercarriage bays deep enough for coolers and folding chairs, plus an onboard restroom that matters on longer multi-stop itineraries.

ADA-accessible vehicles are always available — just let us know before your date so the right vehicle is confirmed in advance.

Atlanta Braves Bus Rental Prices

Party Buses Atlanta offers all-inclusive pricing online in under 30 seconds — you'll know the exact number before you commit. The quote is shaped by a handful of clear factors, not by hidden add-ons after you've booked.

  • Vehicle size — a 56-passenger charter bus and a 14-passenger Sprinter limo are different rates.
  • Total hours — how long the vehicle is reserved for your group, including pre-game time at The Battery and the post-game wait.
  • Date and game — a midweek afternoon game prices differently than a Friday night rivalry series or a July 4 weekend against the Mets.
  • Pickup location and mileage — a Midtown pickup is a shorter run than a Marietta or Kennesaw origin.

For real ranges: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; 15–20 passenger party buses run $204–$378/hour; 20–30 passenger party buses run $244–$414/hour; 35–50 passenger party buses and minibuses run $294–$490/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $150–$300/hour. Pricing depends on mileage, time of year, and vehicle type, but you will never be surprised by hidden costs. Note that the Lot 29 bus parking permit at Truist Park is a separate advance purchase, at $50 per vehicle for 15-passenger vans and $75 for larger vehicles.

Here's the per-person math that usually settles the debate. A single 40-passenger bus, split across 40 people, typically lands well below what each person would pay parking a car at The Battery ($40–$60 per vehicle), buying gas for multiple separate cars, and dealing with surge-priced post-game rideshares. One bus, one flat rate, one permit — versus 10 separate parking decisions and 10 separate exit strategies.

Call 706-583-6718 any time for a free, all-inclusive price quote.

A Real Game-Day Example

To put numbers behind it: last summer, a 35-person fan group booked a 40-passenger party bus for a Saturday night Braves game against the Mets. Pickup at 5:00 PM from a Midtown office building, dropped at Battery Avenue by 5:50 PM — two full hours before first pitch. The group spread across The Battery for dinner at Superica, pre-gamed at Sports & Social, and made it to their seats for the national anthem.

The bus waited in Lot 29 through the game and had the group headed back toward Midtown by 10:45 PM — 25 minutes after the final out, before Windy Ridge had cleared. Seven-hour all-inclusive rental: $2,100 — about $60 per person, parking and post-game exit solved in one number.

Getting There: Routes, Drive Times & Game-Day Traffic

Truist Park's location at I-75 and I-285 in Cumberland is the source of both its accessibility and its traffic headaches. Here are the real drive times from common Atlanta pickup points, before game-day congestion adds its share.

From… Approx. distance Off-peak drive time Game-day estimate
Midtown Atlanta ~10.7 miles 15–20 min 35–55 min
Downtown Atlanta / Five Points ~10–12 miles 15–20 min 40–60 min
Buckhead ~7.6 miles 12–15 min 25–40 min
Hartsfield-Jackson ATL Airport ~20–22 miles 25–30 min 50–70 min
Marietta / Kennesaw ~8–18 miles north 12–25 min 30–50 min
Decatur / Stone Mountain ~18–25 miles 25–35 min 50–70 min

Those off-peak times don't reflect what actually happens on a 7:20 PM Friday start. The I-75/I-285 interchange — the spot every navigation app fights over in the final two miles to Truist Park — is already congested from the evening commute when the first wave of game-day traffic begins to layer on top. The stretch of I-75 between the Chattahoochee River and Circle 75 Parkway can crawl 45 minutes for what's normally a 10-minute drive on sellout nights.

The AJC's "Gridlock Guy" column called Truist Park's traffic plan a success for large events — and it is, relative to what Turner Field was — but "managed" and "fast" are not the same thing. Build in at least 90 minutes of travel buffer for Friday or Saturday night starts if your pickup is coming from south of the stadium.

The exit is where renting a bus earns its real value. Fans driving and parked in The Battery's deck face a managed exit — parking attendants stagger when each level is allowed to leave, and the garage can add 20 to 30 minutes to your departure just in queue time. Fans waiting for rideshares on Windy Ridge are in a similar holding pattern, and post-game surge pricing on that block reliably spikes.

A bus waiting in Lot 29 during the game loads your group directly, takes whichever exit route is clearest — north on Cobb Parkway to I-75, or south and east toward I-285 — and avoids the managed deck crawl entirely.

What's on at Truist Park and The Battery in 2026

The Braves opened the 2026 season at Truist Park against the Kansas City Royals on March 26 — their first home opener since 2022 — and the home schedule runs through late September. A few dates that are historically the toughest for parking and the most compelling reasons to plan transportation early:

  • Opening Series (late March). The home opener draws sellout energy even in cool weather. Parking decks fill faster than mid-season, and the first game of the year always pulls fans who haven't been to Truist Park in months. Book well in advance if your group is coming opening week.
  • July 4 Weekend — Mets at Truist Park. The Braves schedule puts New York in Atlanta for July 4 weekend, and that combination of a marquee opponent, fireworks night, and a holiday weekend reliably sells out. Post-game fireworks extend the crowd's stay in The Battery, which means the Windy Ridge rideshare queue stays deep past midnight. A bus that picks up your group at a confirmed time sidesteps that entirely.
  • Weekend nights against division rivals. Mets, Phillies, Marlins, and Nationals all draw elevated attendance, especially on Friday and Saturday nights when The Battery is simultaneously hosting its dining crowd. On those nights, the parking decks sell out before first pitch and the CobbLinc Circulator runs at full capacity.
  • Second-half home stand — Rangers and Padres. The Braves open the second half with a seven-game home stretch against Texas and San Diego, which lands in late July when Atlanta summer heat is at its peak and attendance tends to run high for the marquee interleague matchups.
  • Live! at the Battery and Coca-Cola Roxy concert nights. When a Battery concert overlaps with a Braves home game, parking around the complex absorbs two full event crowds simultaneously. Battery Avenue, Circle 75 Parkway, and Windy Ridge are all affected. If your group is combining a game and a show on the same night, one bus handling the full itinerary is the only clean solution.

The earlier you book for any of these dates, the better your vehicle selection. For July 4 and sellout weekend games in particular, right-size vehicles book out well in advance. Call 706-583-6718 as soon as your game date is set.

Tips for Visiting Truist Park

A few things every group should know before game day, straight from the Braves' published policies:

  • Bag policy — no backpacks, period. Per the Braves' bag policy, backpacks of any size are prohibited at Truist Park. The permitted options are small single-compartment clutches or clear bags no larger than 5" x 9". Food is allowed if it fits inside a clear, gallon-sized plastic bag, plus one sealed plastic bottle of water per ticket. Bag storage is available between the Orange and Truist Tower decks at the Smart Locker location — opens two hours before first pitch, costs $12 per bag for baseball games.
  • All oversized vehicle parking requires an advance permit. There is no day-of bus parking permit sold at Lot 29. Groups that show up without a pre-purchased permit through the Braves group representative get turned away. We handle the permit coordination when you book.
  • Pre-game dining at The Battery fills up. The two-hour window before first pitch is the busiest dining time at The Battery. Full-service restaurants recommend reservations for groups; walk-in waits at Antico and Superica can run 30–45 minutes on sellout nights.
  • Arrive 90 minutes early on Friday and Saturday nights. That gives your group time to enjoy The Battery, get seated without rushing, and absorb the inevitable game-day traffic without burning out before the first pitch. For July 4 and the home opener, two hours early is smarter.
  • Stay in The Battery after the game. Experienced fans know the trick: linger at Sports & Social or grab a post-game drink at one of the Battery bars for 20–30 minutes after the final out. The parking deck exit queue and the Windy Ridge rideshare surge both ease significantly in that window. With a charter bus, your group has the same flexibility — confirm a pickup window with our team in advance and the bus is there when you're ready, not when the queue dictates.

Who Books a Bus to Truist Park

Different groups, same goal: everyone shows up together, nobody draws straws for who's driving, and the post-game exit doesn't ruin the night. A few of the runs Party Buses Atlanta handles most often for Truist Park:

  • Fan groups and company outings. Large-scale group tickets — office Braves nights, church groups, fantasy baseball crews — where the pregame energy starts the moment the bus pulls away. Party buses with the built-in bar and LED lighting are the move here; by the time the bus hits Cobb Parkway, the group is already in game-day mode.
  • Birthday and milestone celebrations. Combining a Braves game with a birthday dinner at The Battery is a natural Atlanta celebration. The bus handles transportation between the restaurant, the game, and wherever the night goes after the final out.
  • Bachelor and bachelorette parties. Truist Park and The Battery are a legitimate bachelor party destination — dinner at Antico, the game, Sports & Social's axe throwing, and then the party moves wherever the group decides. One bus keeps everyone together from pickup through last call.
  • Corporate client entertainment. Suite nights and club-seat groups where clients are flying in from out of town benefit from a single coordinated pickup at Hartsfield-Jackson and a direct run to Battery Avenue — no rental car logistics, no navigation on an unfamiliar stretch of I-75.
  • Concert and Battery event groups. Live! at the Battery and Coca-Cola Roxy draw their own group bookings, especially for high-demand shows where parking on Circle 75 is already difficult without a game-day crowd on top of it.

Booking, Timing & What to Confirm

Booking an Atlanta party bus or charter bus rental to Truist Park is straightforward, and a little planning makes the whole game-day much smoother:

  1. Request a quote with your group size, pickup location, game date, and how early you want to arrive at The Battery for pre-game dining or drinks.
  2. Confirm the vehicle, the drop point, and the bus permit. We verify the current Battery Avenue drop-off routing and coordinate the Lot 29 oversized vehicle permit for your specific date — so the bus isn't turned away at the access point.
  3. Set your post-game pickup window. Agree on the pickup time and spot before the group splits up for the game. The bus waits in Lot 29 and is right there when you walk out — no Windy Ridge surge queue, no hunting across a parking deck.

A few timing questions that come up constantly: How early should the group arrive? For most games, 90 minutes before first pitch gives a comfortable Battery experience. For sellout games and holiday weekends, two hours is the safer call.

Can the bus wait during the full game? Yes — the bus is reserved as a block of hours, so it can hold in Lot 29 through all nine innings and be ready for pickup at whatever window you've confirmed. What if the game goes to extra innings?

Let our team know and the pickup time adjusts — no scramble.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where exactly does a charter bus drop off at Truist Park?

Drop-offs are permitted near the Third Base Gate at the Battery Delta Deck, located off Battery Avenue — steps from the ballpark's main Third Base entrance. This is the official passenger drop-off point for buses and oversized vehicles. After drop-off, the bus parks in Lot 29 off Circle 75 Parkway, where an ADA cart services pickups and drop-offs at Battery Avenue.

Because access road management can shift by game date, we confirm the exact approach and drop point for your specific event when you book.

Where does the bus park at Truist Park?

Oversized vehicles and buses park in Lot 29 off Circle 75 Parkway. All oversized vehicle parking requires a permit purchased in advance — 15-passenger vans are $50 per vehicle, RVs and larger vehicles are $75 per vehicle. There is no day-of permit sold at the lot.

Permits must be coordinated through the Braves group representative or by calling 404-577-9100 (Option 5). We handle that coordination as part of your booking so the bus isn't turned away on game day.

How much does it cost to rent a bus to Truist Park?

Pricing depends on vehicle size, total hours (including pre-game Battery time and post-game wait), the date, and your pickup location. As a guide: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; small party buses (15–20 passengers) run $204–$378/hour; mid-size party buses (20–30 passengers) run $244–$414/hour; large party buses and minibuses (35–50 passengers) run $294–$490/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $150–$300/hour. All-inclusive pricing is available in under 30 seconds with no hidden costs.

The Lot 29 bus parking permit is a separate advance purchase. Call 706-583-6718 for a free quote.

What is the rideshare pickup zone at Truist Park?

Uber and Lyft pickups and drop-offs are designated on Windy Ridge Parkway between The Battery Atlanta and Cobb Parkway. The zone uses a lettered sign system (A, B, C, etc.) spaced roughly 30 feet apart so riders can direct their app to a specific sign. Post-game surge pricing and extended wait times are common on sellout nights — the Braves' own transportation page notes this.

A private charter bus waiting in Lot 29 cuts out the Windy Ridge queue entirely.

How far is Truist Park from downtown Atlanta?

About 10 to 12 miles from the Five Points area, typically 15 to 20 minutes off-peak. On game nights — especially Friday and Saturday starts when the evening commute and game-day traffic overlap at the I-75/I-285 interchange — plan 45 to 60 minutes from downtown. From Buckhead, it's about 7.6 miles and 12 to 15 minutes off-peak; from Midtown, about 10.7 miles and 13 to 15 minutes off-peak.

Is there public transportation to Truist Park?

MARTA rail doesn't serve Cobb County or Truist Park directly. The closest transit option is MARTA Route 12 bus from Midtown Station to the Cumberland Transfer Center, then a transfer to the CobbLinc Circulator Blue or Green — both free and running until 2 a.m. on game nights. It works for individuals traveling light, but two transfers and a 30-minute circulator interval are not practical for a group with coolers and folding chairs.

The Circulator is noted on the Braves' public transportation page.

What is the bag policy at Truist Park?

Backpacks of any size are prohibited. Permitted bags are small single-compartment clutches or clear bags no larger than 5" x 9". Fans may bring food in a clear, gallon-sized plastic bag and one sealed plastic water bottle per ticket.

Bag storage is available between the Orange and Truist Tower decks (Smart Locker location) for $12 per bag at baseball games, opening two hours before first pitch. Full details on the Braves' official bag policy page.

Can the bus stay parked during the full game?

Yes. The bus is reserved as a block of hours, so it holds in Lot 29 through the entire game and is ready for your arranged post-game pickup. Confirm your pickup window with our team before the group splits up at the gates — the bus is right there when the ninth inning ends, not waiting on Windy Ridge with the rideshare crowd.

How far in advance should we book for a sellout game?

For July 4 weekend, the home opener, and Friday or Saturday night rival series, book as early as your group is committed — those dates compress vehicle availability quickly. For regular weeknight and Sunday afternoon games, two to four weeks of lead time is usually workable. The earlier you call, the better the vehicle selection.

Call 706-583-6718 to lock in your date.

Do you have ADA-accessible buses?

Yes — ADA-accessible vehicles are always available. Let us know your group's needs when you book and we'll confirm the right vehicle is in place before your game date.

Book Your Truist Park Bus Today

The right ride to Cobb County is one call away. Whether it's a Friday night sellout against the Mets, a company Braves outing with 50 employees, a birthday crew who wants the pregame at Superica and the after-party wherever the night goes, or a July 4 fireworks night that would turn into a rideshare nightmare otherwise — Party Buses Atlanta has the right vehicle, the confirmed drop point on Battery Avenue, and the Lot 29 permit coordinated before your group ever boards. Give us a call any time at 706-583-6718 for an all-inclusive price quote, or use our online tool for instant availability.

Sources & Last Verified

Parking logistics, permit pricing, drop-off zones, and venue policies at Truist Park and The Battery Atlanta change by season and event. All details below were verified against official sources in June 2026. Confirm event-specific figures — permit pricing, access road status, bag storage hours — against the official pages before your visit.