Addison Mizner opened the Cloister Inn on Lake Boca Raton in 1926, and a century of reinvention later The Boca Raton remains the standard against which Florida resorts measure themselves. Today the property at 501 East Camino Real spans the pink Mediterranean-revival Cloister, the 27-story Tower, the Yacht Club on the marina, the adults-only Bungalows and a Beach Club reached by water shuttle across Lake Boca. Guests who have spent this much care choosing a room should not leave the ride from Miami International to chance.
The transfer runs 47 miles, typically 50 to 65 minutes: I-95 north to Palmetto Park Road, south briefly on Federal Highway, then through the resort gates off Camino Real. Your chauffeur confirms which building you are staying in before pickup, because arriving at the Cloister porte cochere when your suite is at the Yacht Club adds ten minutes you did not budget. We drop you at the correct entrance, where the bell staff takes over.
Resort guests overwhelmingly choose our premium classes for this run. First Class, an S-Class-grade sedan from $189, matches the property’s tone; the Luxury SUV, from $229, absorbs a family’s beach luggage without strain. The Business sedan from $129 remains available and rides the same route with the same standards. Every fare is fixed and includes the MIA meet and greet, waiting time, flight tracking, tolls and parking.
Traveling for a wedding, board retreat or golf weekend on the property? Book a Sprinter for the group and let individual arrivals share one coordinated pickup schedule; our dispatch matches the manifest to flight numbers so nobody stands at the curb.
What to expect
- Chauffeur greets you inside arrivals and confirms your resort building
- Route: I-95 north to Palmetto Park Road, gates off East Camino Real
- Drop-off at the correct porte cochere: Cloister, Tower, Yacht Club or Bungalows
- Group and event arrivals coordinated by flight number