Paine Field vs. SeaTac: Which Airport Should You Fly From?
A closer terminal with fewer routes, or the big hub with everything? How to choose for your trip from Snohomish County.
Read guide →★ Featured guide
AirportBy the Everett Shuttle dispatch team · 6 min read · Updated June 2026
From most of Snohomish County, plan to leave roughly 3 to 3.5 hours before a domestic flight and about 4 hours before an international flight. That window covers a 60–90 minute drive, a traffic buffer, and the time the airlines ask you to be at the airport.
It sounds like a lot — and on a calm Tuesday it can feel like too much. But the single most common reason travelers miss flights out of SeaTac isn't the security line. It's the drive. The I-5 corridor between Everett and the airport is one of the most congestion-prone stretches in the state, and a 70-minute trip can quietly become a two-hour one. Planning backward from your gate, with the road as the wild card, is how you avoid the sprint through the terminal.
Here's roughly when to be on the road, measured back from your scheduled departure time. Treat these as a floor, not a ceiling.
| Your flight | Leave Snohomish County about | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic · off-peak | 3 hours before | ~90 min for drive + buffer, ~90 min at the airport. |
| Domestic · rush hour | 3.5–4 hours before | Weekday mornings and Friday afternoons clog I-5. |
| International | ~4 hours before | Airlines suggest arriving 3 hours early for international. |
| Holiday / peak travel days | Add 30–60 min | Heavier roads and longer lines at the terminal. |
Airport advice written for someone in Seattle doesn't quite fit if you're starting in Everett, Marysville, or Lynnwood. You're adding a real highway drive on top of the usual airport time, and that drive is the part that swings most. A few things that reliably stretch it:
The airlines' own guidance is the easiest anchor: plan to be at SeaTac about two hours before a domestic flight and three hours before an international flight. Everything else — the drive, parking-or-not, the traffic buffer — gets added on top of that. Because a private transfer drops you right at your terminal door, you skip the park-and-shuttle shuffle, but you still want the airline's cushion for bag drop and security.
Book your pickup the night before and we'll watch your flight. If it moves, we adjust — and you're not the one refreshing a departures board at 5 a.m.
If your route is served from Paine Field (PAE) right here in Everett, it's worth a look before you default to SeaTac. For many Snohomish County travelers it's a fraction of the drive, with a smaller, calmer terminal — which also makes your transfer time far more predictable. SeaTac still wins on sheer number of destinations, so the right answer depends on where you're headed.
Roughly 35–50 miles and about 60–90 minutes without heavy traffic — but two hours or more is realistic in I-5 rush hour, which is exactly why the buffer matters.
Off-peak departures see lighter roads, so the lower end of each range usually holds. Our dispatch runs 24/7, so the pickup time isn't a problem on our end.
Yes. We monitor flights for booked airport transfers and adjust to delays or early changes where we can.
Our growing library of practical guides for getting around — and out of — Snohomish County.
A closer terminal with fewer routes, or the big hub with everything? How to choose for your trip from Snohomish County.
Read guide →Curbside zones, arrivals vs. departures, and how to find your driver without circling the terminal.
Read guide →Two terminals, two very different drop-offs. Confirm which one your sailing uses before you leave home.
Read guide →Boarding windows, terminal traffic, and the buffer that keeps embarkation day relaxed instead of frantic.
Read guide →Door-to-door options for appointments, events, and nights out when driving yourself isn't the plan.
Read guide →The trade-offs between driving, transit, and a private ride for getting into the city and back.
Read guide →How rain, fog, and the occasional snow change your timing — and how much earlier to leave.
Read guide →The busiest travel days of the year, what they do to the roads, and how to stay ahead of the crowds.
Read guide →Right-sizing your bags for a smooth pickup — plus what our luggage allowance covers on the ride.
Read guide →Consolidated billing, dependable pickups, and how corporate accounts keep business travel simple.
Read guide →Flat-rate pricing, 24/7 live dispatch, and drivers who know the roads — from your door to SeaTac, Paine Field, or the pier.