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Centralia, WA Private Car Service | SeaTac Airport, Centralia Outlets, Lewis County Transportation
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Centralia, WA · Lewis County's Largest City · I-5 Midpoint

Centralia's private car service — airport, outlets, and Lewis County's only chauffeur.

Comprehensive chauffeured ground transportation for Centralia, the twin city of Chehalis, and the broader Lewis County region — SeaTac airport shuttle, Centralia Outlets transfers, PDX as alternate, wedding, corporate, cruise, and concert service. Flat-rate pricing from $235 sedan. One operator, one fleet, every booking type.

SeaTac from $235 sedan
Centralia Outlets coverage
Chehalis included



Trip Distance 0 mi
EST. Duration 0 h : 0 m
Quick Answer

What transportation is available in Centralia, WA? Full-service chauffeured ground transportation including SeaTac airport shuttle ($235 sedan / $305 SUV / $415 Sprinter), Portland Airport (PDX) alternate routing, Centralia Outlets transfers, wedding service, corporate accounts, cruise terminal transfers, and Seattle/Tacoma concert runs. Same fleet, same chauffeurs, same flat-rate civilian pricing across every booking type — Lewis County tier.

Coverage area: Centralia (ZIP 98531), the twin city of Chehalis (ZIP 98532), the Centralia Outlets at I-5 Exit 82, and the broader Lewis County I-5 corridor. Centralia sits at the I-5 midpoint between Seattle and Portland. Centralia to SeaTac is approximately 90 miles, 105-125 minutes via I-5 North.

The Founder

A Town Founded by George Washington.

Not the first president — a formerly enslaved African American pioneer who established this town in 1875 and remained its most beloved citizen until his death thirty years later.

Centralia's Founding Story

The Largest U.S. City Founded by an African American of His Era.

George Washington (1817-1905) was born in Frederick County, Virginia, the son of an enslaved man and a woman of English descent. To protect him from a life of slavery, his mother arranged for him to be raised by Anna and James Cochran, a white couple who eventually moved west with him to Ohio and then Missouri. Throughout his early adulthood, Washington was repeatedly blocked by discriminatory laws restricting his right to operate businesses or own land.

In 1850, he led the Cochrans west on the Oregon Trail seeking a freer life. After being barred from owning land in Oregon Territory, he moved north and established a 640-acre claim in 1852 at the confluence of the Skookumchuck and Chehalis rivers — land that had long been home to the Upper Chehalis people. When the Northern Pacific Railroad announced plans to lay tracks through the area in 1872, Washington recognized the opportunity. On January 8, 1875, he and his wife Mary Jane filed the plat for the town of Centerville — later renamed Centralia.

The Washingtons offered lots for $10 each, with free lots to anyone who would build a house. They donated land for a city park, a cemetery, and a Baptist church. When the financial panic of 1893 devastated the town, Washington purchased food wholesale to distribute to struggling residents and held mortgages until owners could pay them. His leadership kept the town alive.

When George Washington died on August 26, 1905, the mayor proclaimed a day of mourning and asked all businesses to close. An estimated 5,000 people attended his funeral — reportedly the largest in Centralia's history. He was buried in the cemetery he had donated.

Centralia today is the largest city in Lewis County and one of the principal commercial centers of southwest Washington. Its founding story remains one of the most remarkable in Pacific Northwest history. When you book transportation to or from Centralia, you're traveling through a town whose existence is the result of one extraordinary person's vision and perseverance.

Why Centralia Matters

Three Identities, One Lewis County Hub.

Centralia is more than its founding story — it's a working regional center with three distinct functional identities that shape how we serve it.

The Halfway Point Between Two Big Cities.

Centralia sits at the I-5 midpoint between Seattle and Portland — approximately 90 miles to either airport. This geographic position has driven the town's economy since the railroad era: a strategic halfway-stop for travelers, freight, and commerce moving between the Pacific Northwest's two largest metros.

For our operation, this means Centralia uniquely supports both SeaTac and PDX as airport options. Some Centralia travelers fly SeaTac (closer at 90 miles); some prefer PDX (100 miles) for cheaper flights or specific airline access. We handle both routes at transparent flat-rate pricing.

Centralia Outlets — A Regional Draw.

Centralia Outlets at I-5 Exit 82 is one of the most-visited regional shopping destinations between Seattle and Portland, drawing day-trip shoppers from across the Pacific Northwest. The outlets anchor Centralia's commercial identity and bring real out-of-area visitor traffic.

This drives a distinctive booking pattern: SeaTac-to-Centralia-Outlets direct transfers for visitors flying in specifically for shopping, group day-trip transportation from Olympia and Tacoma, and Centralia residents using the outlets as a meeting point. Sprinter van bookings for full-day group shopping trips are a recurring pattern.

Centralia + Chehalis as One Region.

Centralia (population ~18,200) and Chehalis (population ~7,400, the Lewis County seat) sit 3 miles apart on I-5 and function as twin cities operationally. Together they anchor southwest Washington's largest commercial corridor outside the I-5 Olympia-Tacoma-Seattle metro chain.

Combined infrastructure includes Centralia College, Providence Centralia Hospital, the Chehalis-Centralia Airport, the Southwest Washington Fairgrounds, McMenamins Olympic Club Theater, and the Lewis County Historical Museum. We serve both cities at the same Lewis County flat-rate pricing — same fleet, same dispatch, one zone.

Everything from Centralia

One Operator, Every Booking Type.

Eight service categories available from any Centralia, Chehalis, or Lewis County address. Same fleet, same chauffeurs, same flat-rate pricing.

SeaTac Airport Shuttle

The most common Centralia booking. Door-to-door pickup at any Centralia or Chehalis address, direct to SeaTac terminal via I-5. Flight tracking included. Same flat rate 24/7.

$235 sedan · $305 SUV · $415 Sprinter

PDX as Alternate Airport

Centralia's I-5 midpoint position makes Portland International (PDX) a feasible alternate. 100 miles via I-5 South, 110-130 minutes. Useful for cheaper flights or specific airline access.

$265 sedan · $335 SUV · $445 Sprinter

Centralia Outlets Transfers

Direct SeaTac to Centralia Outlets transportation at I-5 Exit 82. Visitors fly in for the day, we drive direct. Group day-trip shopping bookings welcome — Sprinter recommended for groups.

$245 sedan · $315 SUV · $425 Sprinter

Wedding Transportation

Centralia, Chehalis, and Lewis County weddings. Rural Chehalis River valley venues, Southwest Washington Fairgrounds, historic downtown venues including McMenamins Olympic Club, and barn/farm settings.

Custom quote · 4-hour minimum on hourly

Corporate Accounts

Net-30 invoicing, dedicated account manager, priority dispatch. Centralia clients include Providence Centralia Hospital, Centralia College, Centralia Outlets management, Lincoln Creek Lumber, and Lewis County government offices in Chehalis.

Same as personal · Net-30 billing

Cruise Terminal Transfers

Centralia to Pier 91 (Smith Cove) and Pier 66 (Bell Street). Approximately 100 miles via I-5 North, 115-140 minutes. SUV recommended for cruise luggage.

$245 sedan · $315 SUV · $425 Sprinter

Concert & Event Transportation

Round-trip hourly bookings to Climate Pledge Arena, Lumen Field, T-Mobile Park, Tacoma Dome. Chauffeur waits during the event, drives back to Centralia after the show. 4-hour minimum.

$85/hr sedan · $95/hr SUV · $135/hr Sprinter

24/7 Dispatch

Same flat rate regardless of pickup time. Early-morning Centralia departures require pickup roughly 2.5 hours before flight. Late-night returns from SeaTac handled with flight tracking.

No early-morning premium · No surge
Centralia to SeaTac Pricing

Lewis County Tier Flat-Rate Pricing.

One-way pricing from any Centralia or Chehalis address to any SeaTac terminal. Round-trip bookings include a return discount.

Luxury Sedan
1-3 passengers · Up to 3 bags
$235
Centralia or Chehalis to SeaTac · One-way
  • Mercedes E-Class or Tesla Model S
  • Door-to-door pickup
  • Flight tracking included
  • Lewis County tier · No surge
Book Sedan
Sprinter Van
Up to 14 passengers · Group luggage
$415
Centralia or Chehalis to SeaTac · One-way
  • Mercedes Sprinter executive trim
  • Wedding parties, family groups
  • Group luggage capacity
  • Outlet shopping group bookings
Book Sprinter
The Route

Centralia to SeaTac, Mile by Mile.

Actual drive details — straight I-5 from start to finish, with the only meaningful variable being traffic.

Straight I-5 North to SeaTac.

The Centralia to SeaTac drive runs I-5 North from I-5 Exit 82 (the Centralia Outlets exit) or Exit 81 (downtown Centralia) through Olympia, Lacey, JBLM, Lakewood, and Tacoma to SeaTac. Total distance is approximately 90 miles — pure interstate driving.

Typical drive time is 105-125 minutes in normal traffic. The Centralia-to-Olympia segment is ~25 miles and takes about 25 minutes; Olympia-to-SeaTac is then 65 miles and 80-100 minutes depending on JBLM and Tacoma traffic. Add 15-30 minutes during weekday rush hours.

For early-morning departures, we plan 115 minutes plus 30-minute security buffer, putting Centralia pickup around 3:00 AM for a 6:00 AM flight. We monitor I-5 conditions overnight and adjust for construction or weather.

For PDX as alternate airport, the route is I-5 South through Vader, Castle Rock, Kelso, and across the Columbia River into Oregon — 100 miles, 110-130 minutes. Pricing reflects the slightly longer distance.

Centralia Drive Distances

To SeaTac Airport ~90 mi
SeaTac drive time 105-125 min
To Portland Airport (PDX) ~100 mi
To Seattle (downtown) ~95 mi
To Portland (downtown) ~95 mi
To Tacoma Dome ~65 mi
To Olympia (downtown) ~25 mi
To Chehalis ~3 mi
To Pier 91 cruise terminal ~100 mi
Centralia Coverage Area

Where We Pick Up in Lewis County.

Door-to-door pickup throughout Centralia, Chehalis, and the broader Lewis County I-5 corridor at the same flat rate.

Downtown Centralia

ZIP 98531 · Historic Core

The downtown business district along Tower Avenue and Pine Street — historic buildings including the McMenamins Olympic Club Theater, the Fox Theatre, downtown shopping, and the Burlington Northern railroad corridor. Common pickup zone for tourism and event-related travel.

Centralia Residential

ZIP 98531

Residential neighborhoods radiating from downtown Centralia — including the west side residential areas, the Centralia College vicinity, and the broader unincorporated areas immediately surrounding the city. Standard residential pickup zone.

Centralia Outlets

I-5 Exit 82

The Centralia Outlets shopping destination at I-5 Exit 82 — regional draw for day-trip shoppers from across the Pacific Northwest. We pick up and drop at the main outlet entrance and parking area. Outlet-specific transfer rate is slightly different from the standard Centralia city rate.

Chehalis (Lewis County Seat)

ZIP 98532 · 3 miles south

Chehalis is the Lewis County seat — county courthouse, government offices, the Lewis County Historical Museum, Vintage Motorcycle Museum, and Security State Bank. Same Lewis County flat-rate pricing as Centralia proper. Downtown Chehalis has 11 properties on the National Register of Historic Places.

Centralia College

ZIP 98531

The Centralia College campus on West Walnut Street — community college serving Lewis County, with student housing and faculty residences in the surrounding area. Common pickup for visiting faculty, college events, and student airport travel during academic break periods.

Southwest Washington Fairgrounds

Chehalis · ZIP 98532

The Southwest Washington Fairgrounds in Chehalis hosts the annual Southwest Washington Fair, major events, equestrian competitions, and large-group gatherings. Common pickup pattern for event-related visitor transportation, weddings, and fairgrounds bookings.

Chehalis-Centralia Airport

Aviation · General Use

The Chehalis-Centralia Airport sits between the two cities and serves general aviation, charter flights, and private aircraft. Transportation pickups from this airport are sometimes combined with onward SeaTac transfers for travelers connecting from private flights.

Lewis County Borders

Rural · Borderline addresses

Rural addresses throughout the Chehalis River valley, including Toledo, Napavine, Adna, and other Lewis County communities along or near the I-5 corridor. Borderline rural addresses are quoted based on actual pickup location. For Centralia-tier base rate, addresses should be within ~10 miles of I-5.

Common Questions

Centralia Transportation FAQs.

Plain-language answers about every service type, pricing, scheduling, and what to expect.

How much is a shuttle from Centralia to SeaTac Airport?
Centralia to SeaTac Airport flat-rate pricing is $235 sedan, $305 SUV, and $415 Sprinter van (one-way). This is our Lewis County tier — reflecting the ~90-mile drive distance and the operational expansion into Lewis County dispatch. Pricing is locked at booking with no surge regardless of time of day, day of week, or traffic conditions. The rate covers door-to-door pickup throughout Centralia (ZIP 98531), the twin city of Chehalis (ZIP 98532), and the broader Lewis County I-5 corridor.
How long does it take to drive from Centralia to SeaTac?
Centralia to SeaTac Airport is approximately 90 miles via I-5 North. Drive time is typically 105-125 minutes in normal traffic, expanding to 120-150 minutes during weekday rush hours. The route is straight I-5 North from I-5 Exit 82 (the Centralia Outlets exit) through Olympia, Lacey, JBLM, Lakewood, and Tacoma to SeaTac. For early-morning flights, we plan a 115-minute drive plus security buffer, putting Centralia pickup roughly 2.5 hours before departure. We monitor I-5 conditions overnight and adjust for construction or weather.
Do you provide transportation to Centralia Outlets?
Yes. Centralia Outlets is a regular pickup and drop-off destination at I-5 Exit 82, served by the same flat-rate pricing as Centralia city addresses ($245 sedan from SeaTac for the dedicated outlets transfer). The outlets pull regional shopping visitors from across the Pacific Northwest given the midway I-5 location between Seattle and Portland. Common bookings include SeaTac arrival shoppers headed direct to the outlets, day-trip group transportation from Olympia and Tacoma, and Centralia residents using the outlets as a meeting point. For groups, the Sprinter van handles full-day shopping trips with chauffeur waiting between stores.
Do you serve Chehalis from Centralia?
Yes. Chehalis is the Lewis County seat, 3 miles south of Centralia on I-5, and the twin city to Centralia. Chehalis pickups use the same Lewis County flat-rate pricing — $235 sedan to SeaTac — since the drive distance and dispatch are functionally identical. ZIP 98532 covers Chehalis. The Lewis County Historical Museum, Southwest Washington Fairgrounds, Vintage Motorcycle Museum, and the Chehalis-Centralia Airport are all common Chehalis pickup landmarks. Centralia and Chehalis operate as one service zone for our transportation purposes.
Who founded Centralia, Washington?
Centralia was founded on January 8, 1875, by George Washington (1817-1905), an African American pioneer who came west via the Oregon Trail in 1850 to escape discrimination. Born in Virginia to an enslaved father and a woman of English descent, he was raised by Anna and James Cochran, a white couple. After being barred from owning land in Oregon Territory, he established a 640-acre claim at the confluence of the Skookumchuck and Chehalis rivers. When the Northern Pacific Railroad arrived in 1872, he and his wife Mary Jane platted the town — originally called Centerville, renamed Centralia by 1883. Centralia was the largest U.S. city founded by an African American of that era. When George Washington died in 1905, all businesses in town closed and roughly 5,000 mourners attended his funeral. He remains the town's most significant historical figure.
What services do you provide in Centralia besides airport transportation?
Full service portfolio from Centralia: SeaTac airport shuttle, Portland International Airport (PDX) transportation (Centralia sits at the I-5 midpoint between SEA and PDX), Centralia Outlets transfers, wedding transportation for events in Centralia, Chehalis, and the broader Lewis County area, corporate accounts for Lewis County businesses, cruise terminal transfers to Pier 91 and Pier 66, Seattle and Tacoma concert and event transportation, and local Centralia chauffeur service. Same fleet — luxury sedans, SUVs, and Sprinter vans — serves all booking types.
Do you provide transportation to Portland Airport (PDX) from Centralia?
Yes. Centralia sits at the I-5 midpoint between Seattle and Portland, making PDX a feasible alternative to SeaTac for some travelers. The drive is approximately 100 miles via I-5 South, 110-130 minutes in normal traffic. PDX pricing from Centralia: $265 sedan, $335 SUV, $445 Sprinter (one-way), reflecting the slightly longer distance and Oregon-state-line dispatch. This is useful for travelers whose flights are cheaper from PDX or who prefer the Portland airport experience. Compare to $235 sedan to SeaTac — the SeaTac route is shorter and slightly cheaper.
Do you provide wedding transportation in Centralia?
Yes. Centralia wedding transportation covers ceremonies and receptions throughout Lewis County — private rural properties throughout the Chehalis River valley, the Southwest Washington Fairgrounds for larger events, historic downtown venues including McMenamins Olympic Club, and Chehalis-area farm and barn venues. Wedding shuttles typically pick up guests from Centralia and Chehalis hotels and shuttle to the venue, then handle post-reception returns. Centralia has a small but growing destination wedding market given the affordable hotel inventory and the I-5 accessibility for guests traveling from Seattle and Portland. Custom-quoted per event.
Do you offer corporate accounts for Centralia and Lewis County businesses?
Yes. Centralia corporate accounts include Net-30 invoicing, dedicated account manager, and priority dispatch. As the largest city in Lewis County, Centralia has a real corporate base — typical clients include healthcare professionals at Providence Centralia Hospital, Centralia College administrators and visiting faculty, Centralia Outlets management, Lincoln Creek Lumber and other timber-industry operators, and regional manufacturing and warehousing operators that anchor Lewis County's economy. Chehalis corporate clients (the county seat, government offices, Security State Bank) are also served at the same Lewis County flat-rate pricing. Standard corporate rates match personal rates ($235 sedan Centralia-to-SeaTac); contact us for account setup. See our Corporate Transportation page.
Do you offer cruise terminal transportation from Centralia?
Yes. Centralia to Seattle cruise terminal transportation covers both Pier 91 (Smith Cove), the primary Alaska cruise terminal, and Pier 66 (Bell Street), used by Norwegian and select itineraries. The drive is approximately 100 miles via I-5 North, 115-140 minutes in typical traffic with additional time during summer peak cruise season. Cruise pricing from Centralia: $245 sedan, $315 SUV (recommended for cruise luggage), or $425 Sprinter for groups. Return-trip pickup on disembarkation day includes pier-delay monitoring.
What are the hourly rates for Centralia concert and event transportation?
Concert and event transportation from Centralia to Seattle and Tacoma venues operates as round-trip hourly bookings: $85/hr sedan, $95/hr SUV, $135/hr Sprinter, with a 4-hour minimum. Pickup at your Centralia address, drive to the venue, chauffeur waits during the event, drive back to Centralia after the show. Given the 95-100 mile distance to Seattle venues (Climate Pledge Arena, Lumen Field, T-Mobile Park) and 65-70 miles to Tacoma Dome, typical Centralia-to-Seattle concert booking runs 8-9 hours putting most in the $680-$855 sedan range. Tacoma Dome bookings run shorter, typically 6-7 hours.
What ZIP codes does Centralia service cover?
Centralia uses ZIP 98531, and the twin city of Chehalis uses ZIP 98532 — both served at the same Lewis County flat-rate pricing. Coverage includes the city of Centralia proper, Centralia Outlets at I-5 Exit 82, downtown Chehalis including the Lewis County Courthouse, Centralia College campus, the residential areas radiating from both downtowns, and rural addresses throughout the broader Chehalis River valley. Borderline rural addresses (south toward Toledo, west toward Pe Ell) are quoted based on actual pickup location.
How do I book Centralia transportation?
Three ways: online booking form on this page, phone at 360-944-0606 with 24/7 dispatch, or email info@olympiaairportshuttle.com. Confirmations are sent within one hour during business hours, immediately for phone bookings. We recommend booking 24-48 hours ahead for predictable scheduling; Centralia booking lead time may tighten during peak periods given dispatch repositioning time from our Olympia base. For Centralia Outlets group shopping trips and event-related Lewis County bookings, additional advance notice is helpful.
Book Your Centralia Trip

Request a Centralia Quote.

Tell us pickup address, destination (including Centralia Outlets or PDX), and date. We send back a confirmed flat-rate quote within one hour during business hours.

Or call 360-944-0606 for immediate booking · 24/7 dispatch

Centralia's Private Transportation Partner.

One operator covering Lewis County's largest city and the twin city of Chehalis. Airport, outlets, weddings, corporate, and everything in between. Locally owned and dispatching since 2009.