Every August, Liberty Avenue in Bloomfield shuts down to cars and opens up to more than 100,000 people who come for the pasta, the cannoli, the bocce, and three stages of live music. It is Pittsburgh's largest heritage festival and one of the few events in the city where the destination itself becomes the obstacle — because the same Liberty Avenue corridor that fills with Italian flags and food vendors is also the road you were planning to drive in on. Street closures from Taylor Street to Gross Street begin Saturday morning at 10 a.m. and do not lift until Sunday night, and every nearby residential block is permit-only parking.

The result is a festival people love arriving at by bus, not by car.

This guide covers exactly how group transportation to Bloomfield Little Italy Days works: where a bus drops your group, which approach roads stay open when Liberty Avenue closes, where the free shuttle originates, how to read the parking map, and what size vehicle fits a party of 15 versus a party of 50. It is the same planning information Party Buses Pittsburgh uses when coordinating group trips to the festival every August — written for the person who is trying to get everyone there together, on time, and without the scramble of hunting for a spot on a street that is technically closed to them anyway.

Festival dates (2026)

August 13–16, 2026 — Thu 5–9 pm, Fri–Sat noon–9 pm, Sun noon–5 pm

Location

Liberty Ave, Bloomfield — Ella St. to Gross St.

Admission

Completely free

Attendance

100,000+ over four days

Street closure window

Liberty Ave: Sat 10 am – Sun 11:59 pm

Free shuttle origin

UPMC Luna Garage, 5111 Baum Blvd — Sat & Sun only

What Bloomfield Little Italy Days Actually Is

Little Italy Days launched in 2002 as a one-neighborhood block party and has grown into Pittsburgh's largest heritage festival. The festival runs four days on Liberty Avenue between Ella Street and Gross Street in Bloomfield — the neighborhood that has been Pittsburgh's center of Italian-American life since the early 20th century, settled by immigrants from the Abruzzi region. More than 100 years of continuous Italian heritage, and one long August weekend where the whole city shows up to celebrate it.

The festival is packed into a tight stretch. Three stages run simultaneously, so there is live music from one end of the festival to the other at all hours: Italian opera, accordion performances, tribute bands, and local acts rotate through a full entertainment schedule. The celebrity bocce tournament, where local media personalities and Pittsburgh community figures face off for charity and bragging rights, draws its own crowd on Thursday.

The Miss Little Italy pageant runs Saturday with six age divisions. And the food — piping hot pizza by the slice, meatball sandwiches, pasta, sfogliatelle, cannoli, gelato, sausage with peppers and onions, and enough espresso to fuel the whole neighborhood — comes from more than 50 vendors lining both sides of Liberty Avenue.

The festival is entirely free to attend. There is no gate, no wristband, and no ticket. You walk in from either end of Liberty Avenue and the whole four-block stretch is yours.

That openness is exactly what makes the logistics interesting for groups, because there is no single designated entry point — which means where your bus drops you off determines how far you walk to reach the heart of things.

Liberty Avenue in Bloomfield, Pittsburgh — the festival runs from Ella Street to Gross Street, with Liberty Ave closed to vehicle traffic Saturday morning through Sunday night.

The Parking and Street Closure Problem, Explained Plainly

Here is what most guides to Little Italy Days understate: the parking situation is not just inconvenient on festival weekend — it is deliberately constrained, by the festival organizers, the city, and the surrounding residential neighborhood. Understanding each piece of that helps explain why a private bus is the cleanest solution for any group larger than a carpool.

Liberty Avenue itself closes. From Taylor Street to Gross Street, Liberty Avenue is shut to vehicle traffic starting Saturday at 10 a.m. and does not reopen until Sunday at 11:59 p.m. That is the full heart of the festival.

On Thursday and Friday, traffic still moves, but by Saturday morning the street is entirely pedestrianized. You are not parking on Liberty Avenue or anywhere near it.

Residential permit zones are enforced. The blocks surrounding Bloomfield's business district are permitted residential parking, and the festival explicitly asks visitors not to use them. This is not a soft suggestion — residents park there, they need those spots, and citations are issued.

The streets that look like an option on a map are not actually available to festival visitors.

The free garages fill up fast on Saturday and Sunday. The festival publishes a list of free parking locations: UPMC Luna Garage (5111 Baum Blvd), Liberty & Aspen garage, UPMC Aiken Ave garage (520 S. Aiken Ave), Center Ave garage (5200 Center Ave), and the UPMC Urgent Care lot (5231 Center Ave). These are genuinely free and they are the right move for a car.

But on Saturday afternoon, especially, they fill quickly. Groups who drove in separate cars circle, split up, and spend the first 20 minutes of the festival regrouping via text instead of eating cannoli.

The practical upshot for a group: the "free parking" solution works one car at a time, but it splits a group across multiple locations and adds significant walk time to each. A charter bus drops your entire group at a single point and meets them at the same point at the end of the night. That is a fundamentally different experience, and it is the reason groups book a Pittsburgh party bus rental for Little Italy Days rather than trying to coordinate five cars.

Where a Bus Drops Off Your Group at Little Italy Days

The festival's published transportation guidance points to several approach roads that remain open even when Liberty Avenue is closed. Taylor Street, Mathilda Street, and Millvale Avenue all stay open through the festival weekend and connect to the edge of the festival area. Those are the corridors a bus uses to reach a drop-off point that is actually close to where your group wants to be.

The cleanest drop-off for a charter bus or minibus on Saturday and Sunday is on Taylor Street near the western end of the festival corridor, putting your group at the Liberty Avenue and Taylor Street intersection — the western entrance to the closed festival block. From there, the group walks east along the festival with food, stages, and vendors running the full length of Liberty Avenue to Gross Street. You enter where the crowd is already building and work your way through the full festival.

Alternatively, groups approaching from the east can use Gross Street or the streets just north of Liberty to access the eastern end of the festival near Gross and Liberty. Either approach keeps a bus on roads that are open and gets the group within steps of the festival without navigating a closed Liberty Avenue. When you book with Party Buses Pittsburgh, the specific drop point is confirmed for your event date — approach routes and any supplemental festival-weekend restrictions are verified in advance so there is no discovering a closed block at the curb.

On Thursday and Friday, Liberty Avenue is still open to vehicle traffic, and a bus can drop closer to the festival's center along the Liberty Avenue corridor between Ella and Taylor. The full Saturday-Sunday closure is what requires the Taylor or Gross Street approach; Thursday and Friday are significantly more flexible for vehicle access.

The one-line version: on Saturday and Sunday, a bus drops your group at the Taylor Street entrance or the Gross Street end of the festival — both are steps from Liberty Avenue, both are on roads that stay open during the closure window, and both put your group in the festival in under a two-minute walk. That beats circling the UPMC Luna Garage hoping for a spot.

The UPMC Luna Garage Shuttle — And Why a Bus Beats It for Groups

The festival does run a complimentary shuttle service from the UPMC Luna Garage at 5111 Baum Blvd on Saturday and Sunday. You pull in through the front entrance, park for free, and exit through the back of the garage for a short two-block walk up Gross Street to the festival's east entrance. The shuttle is a genuine convenience for individuals and couples driving in, and it solves the "where do I park?" problem cleanly for one car at a time.

For a group of 20, 30, or 45 people, the math shifts. Everyone still needs to arrive at the Luna Garage at roughly the same time, which means coordinating across multiple vehicles on Baum Boulevard during one of Bloomfield's busiest festival weekends. Baum Boulevard itself sees elevated traffic on Saturday and Sunday as thousands of attendees funnel toward the same parking corridor.

Then the shuttle back at the end of the night adds another assembly point and another wait — at 8 p.m. on a Saturday, with everyone trying to leave at once.

A Pittsburgh charter bus rental does something the shuttle cannot: it picks your entire group up at one location, drops them at the festival perimeter together, and comes back to that same spot at whatever time your group decides to leave — not when the shuttle runs. For groups of 15 or more, the private bus is the shuttle, the parking lot, and the post-festival pickup all in one.

Which Vehicle Fits Your Group?

The festival draws groups that range from office departments of 20 to extended Italian-American families of 50 who come specifically for the bocce tournament and the food. The right vehicle is the one that seats everyone without paying for empty seats you do not need. Here is how the fleet breaks down for a Bloomfield Little Italy Days run.

Vehicle Typical capacity Best for Key amenities
Sprinter van / 14-passenger Sprinter limo Up to 14 Small friend groups, family pods, office teams Premium leather, USB charging, tinted windows
15–35 passenger minibus 15–35 Mid-size groups, neighborhood associations, club outings Powerful A/C, plush reclining seats, overhead storage
Party bus (15–50 passengers) 15–50 Groups who want the celebration on the ride itself Built-in bar, LED lighting, premium sound, flat-panel TVs
40–56 passenger charter bus Up to 56 Large family reunions, corporate outings, club events Reclining seats, climate control, overhead storage, WiFi, power outlets, onboard restroom, undercarriage bays

For most Little Italy Days groups, the decision comes down to headcount and how much of the evening's energy you want on the bus versus at the festival. A 15- to 35-passenger minibus is the go-to for the Bloomfield run: it navigates the neighborhood streets easily, parks at the end of the drop-off point without difficulty, and seats a typical group outing without paying for a full charter bus at a small-group headcount. A party bus makes sense when the pre-festival gathering is part of the event — LED lighting, a bar, and a sound system that keeps the Italian playlist going from someone's driveway in Squirrel Hill to the Liberty Avenue drop-off.

For larger groups — a family reunion that has taken over an entire section of the bocce tournament, or a corporate event where 50 employees are attending together — a full-size charter bus with undercarriage storage handles everyone comfortably and carries along anything the group brings for a night out. ADA-accessible vehicles are always available; just let us know your needs in advance and we will match you with the right vehicle in our Pittsburgh fleet.

What a Bus to Bloomfield Little Italy Days Costs

Party Buses Pittsburgh provides all-inclusive pricing online in under 30 seconds — you will know the exact price before you ever book. There is no single number for a Little Italy Days rental because the quote is shaped by several clear factors: your group's headcount, the vehicle that fits it, how many total hours the bus is reserved (pickup through post-festival return), the origin of your pickup, and the date. Thursday and Friday evenings are more available than the Saturday-Sunday window, when demand across Pittsburgh's entire event calendar competes for the same vehicles.

For real ranges to anchor your planning: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run roughly $155–$285/hour; 15–25 passenger minibuses run $155–$320/hour; 30–50 passenger party buses run $295–$500/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $195–$400/hour. Most Little Italy Days group trips are booked as 4–6 hour blocks, which covers the pickup, the festival, and the return ride with a comfortable buffer for the group to stay as long as it wants.

Here is the per-person math that usually settles the debate. A party bus for 30 people at $350/hour for 5 hours works out to roughly $58/person. That covers pickup at someone's home or a central meeting point, the festival drop-off, a post-festival pickup, and the return ride — with everyone together the entire time, no parking cost, no split groups, and no one driving.

Compare that to coordinating five or six separate cars, each paying for gas, each hunting for a garage, and each arriving and leaving at different times. The bus wins on both convenience and, often, total cost per head. Call 412-894-0966 or use our online quote tool for the exact number for your date and group size.

All Your Transportation Options, Compared

We will be straight with you: a private bus is not the right answer for every group. If two people are going to Little Italy Days, Uber to the Taylor Street perimeter makes total sense. But here is the honest comparison for groups of 10 and up, scored on what actually matters for a four-day Pittsburgh street festival.

Option Arrive together? Parking required? Works on Sat/Sun closures? Best for
Private charter bus / party bus Yes — one vehicle No Yes — drops at Taylor St. or Gross St. Groups of 15–56
UPMC Luna Garage + shuttle Only if everyone drives together Yes — free, but fills fast Yes — shuttle Sat/Sun only Couples and individuals; awkward for 10+
Port Authority bus (routes 54, 64, 86, 87) No — dependent on route timing No Yes — routes serve Bloomfield perimeter Individuals; not practical for group coordination
Rideshare (Uber / Lyft) No — multiple cars, multiple ETAs No Yes — drops at perimeter 1–4 per ride; fragments larger groups
Drive and park on your own No — caravans split up Yes — and fills fast Difficult — Liberty Ave closed, residential blocks permit-only Very small groups; 1–2 cars

The honest read: for one or two people, the Luna Garage shuttle or a Port Authority route from Oakland or downtown is perfectly workable. The festival is free; the city's bus network does reach Bloomfield's perimeter; and Uber gets close enough on streets that stay open. But the moment a group grows past a couple of cars' worth of people, the coordination cost of separate vehicles — different arrival times, different garage levels, different post-festival pickup ETAs — clearly points toward one bus.

That is the group the rest of this guide is written for.

Public Transit to Little Italy Days

The Port Authority (PRT) runs five bus routes through Bloomfield, which is one of the neighborhood's strongest claims for transit access in Pittsburgh. Routes 54, 64, 86, and 87 all serve the Liberty Avenue corridor or connect to it from nearby streets. The 86 — the Liberty route — runs directly along Liberty Avenue and provides direct service from downtown Pittsburgh; on festival weekends with the closure in effect, buses reroute to parallel streets and drop near the festival perimeter rather than through the closed block.

For a group arriving from scattered pickup points across Pittsburgh, working around a specific PRT schedule is extra hassle that a private bus takes off the table entirely. But for attendees coming from Oakland, downtown, or the East End who want to get themselves to the festival independently, PRT is a legitimate and often fast option. Check PRT's schedule finder for real-time routes before you leave.

Healthy Ride bike share also has three stations in Bloomfield, and Bike Pittsburgh publishes maps for cycling routes into the neighborhood. On a warm August evening, cycling to Little Italy Days is one of the better ways to arrive — the festival provides dedicated bike parking at both Liberty & Aspen and Liberty & Taylor, the western and eastern anchors of the festival.

Getting There: Routes, Pittsburgh Traffic, and Timing

Bloomfield sits just east of downtown and just north of Oakland, which means it is genuinely accessible from most Pittsburgh neighborhoods without a long drive. The issue on festival Saturday is that everyone within a five-mile radius has the same idea at the same time, and the roads that feed into Bloomfield — Liberty Avenue from Oakland, Penn Avenue from Lawrenceville, Baum Boulevard from the East End — all see elevated festival traffic during the peak arrival window of noon to 3 p.m. on Saturday.

From… Approx. distance Typical drive time (off-peak)
Downtown Pittsburgh / Point Breeze ~3–4 miles 10–15 minutes
Oakland / University of Pittsburgh area ~1–2 miles 5–10 minutes
Lawrenceville / Penn Ave corridor ~1.5–2 miles 5–10 minutes
South Side / Mt. Washington ~3–5 miles 15–25 minutes
North Side / North Shore ~4–5 miles 15–20 minutes
Squirrel Hill / Shadyside ~2–3 miles 10–15 minutes

Those times are for off-peak conditions. On festival Saturday, add 10–20 minutes to any of them as traffic backs up toward the parking garages and the closed Liberty Avenue blocks. A bus helps here for a specific reason: it makes that drive once, drops your group, and waits away from the congestion.

Your group does not sit in the same traffic that individual cars are stuck in on the way to the garage, because the bus is not fighting for the parking that creates the backup in the first place.

The recommended approach routes from the organizers — Taylor Street, Mathilda Street, and Millvale Avenue — are the corridors that stay clear even when Liberty is closed. These are the same streets a charter bus uses to reach the drop-off points on the festival perimeter. We go around the closed blocks and wait on an open street so your group steps off the bus and walks two minutes to the food and music rather than ten minutes from a parking structure three blocks away.

Groups We Take to Little Italy Days

Little Italy Days draws every kind of group, and the transportation question shifts a little by group type. A few of the runs we coordinate most often for the festival:

  • Family reunions. Extended Italian-American families who come specifically for the heritage celebration — grandparents through grandkids in one vehicle, no one asking who has to drive. Often a 40- to 56-passenger charter bus for larger reunions, or a pair of minibuses for groups that want to split up inside the festival but arrive together.
  • Corporate and office outings. Companies based in Oakland or downtown Pittsburgh who bring a team to the festival as a summer outing. A minibus or mid-size party bus seats the team comfortably, picks everyone up from the office, and returns them to the same spot after the bocce tournament and dinner.
  • Neighborhood associations and club groups. Italian-American social clubs, parish groups, and neighborhood organizations who attend as a block, often for multiple festival days. A standing charter bus arrangement covers Thursday through Sunday for groups that attend the full run.
  • Bachelorette and birthday groups. Summer celebrations that use Little Italy Days as one stop on a Pittsburgh night out — the party bus picks everyone up, drops at the festival for food and live music, and continues to the next stop in Lawrenceville or the South Side without the group ever fragmenting.
  • Out-of-town visitors. Groups staying downtown or in Shadyside who want to attend the festival without renting cars or navigating an unfamiliar neighborhood on foot. A minibus pickup from the hotel gets the entire visiting party to Liberty Avenue together.

Tips for First-Timers at Bloomfield Little Italy Days

A few things worth knowing before your group arrives, straight from the festival's published information and from running groups to this event every year:

  • The festival is rain or shine. Pittsburgh in August can deliver a thunderstorm on a Saturday afternoon with essentially no warning. Severe weather may affect entertainment acts on the outdoor stages, but the festival itself continues. Your bus does not cancel because it is raining; plan accordingly with light layers if the forecast looks variable.
  • Thursday is the easiest entry day. Liberty Avenue is still open to traffic on Thursday evening (5–9 p.m.), the crowd is smaller than the weekend, and the celebrity bocce tournament is one of the festival's most entertaining features. For groups that want the full Little Italy Days experience without the Saturday afternoon crowd, Thursday is the pick.
  • Portable restrooms are stationed throughout the venue. The festival installs them along the Liberty Avenue corridor. Know where they are before the group splits up, especially with kids.
  • Service animals are welcome; personal dogs are not recommended. The organizers explicitly note the festival is not a good environment for personal dogs due to crowd density. Do not bring them.
  • The bocce tournament runs Saturday and Sunday, with team entries handled through the festival organization. If your group wants to enter a team, contact littleitalydaysbocce@gmail.com well in advance of August — spots fill.
  • Bike parking is dedicated and free at Liberty & Aspen (western end) and Liberty & Taylor (eastern end). For groups splitting into cyclists and bus riders, the bike stations are a clean secondary meet point.

Booking Your Pittsburgh Party Bus for Little Italy Days

Booking is straightforward, and a little planning makes the festival day seamless. Have these details ready and we will build your quote fast:

  1. Your group size. This determines the vehicle. A group of 22 fits a minibus; a group of 45 needs a charter bus or a large party bus. We never book you into more vehicle than you actually need.
  2. Your festival day. Thursday and Friday evenings before the Liberty Avenue closure are more flexible for drop-off; Saturday and Sunday require the Taylor Street or Gross Street approach. Knowing which day helps us confirm the exact drop-off route.
  3. Your pickup location. A home in Squirrel Hill, an office in Oakland, a hotel downtown, a parking lot in Shadyside — wherever the group is gathering, the bus picks up there. Multi-stop pickups across the East End are also easy to arrange.
  4. Your time window. How long does your group plan to stay? The bus is reserved as a block of hours, so if the group wants to arrive at noon and leave at 9 p.m., that is a 9-hour block. Most groups find 4–6 hours covers the full festival experience with room to spare.

On timing: Little Italy Days is a summer Saturday event, and summer Saturdays are the highest-demand period in Pittsburgh's event calendar. Prom season runs April through May. Graduation weekends fill May and June.

By the time August arrives, the remaining Saturday inventory in our fleet is the slimmer half of the season. Book your Little Italy Days bus by June at the latest if you want the vehicle that actually fits your group at the rate that matches your budget. Groups that call in late July are not necessarily turned away, but the right-size vehicle is not guaranteed and the rate is higher.

Call 412-894-0966 as soon as your group has a headcount and a day confirmed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where exactly does a charter bus drop off at Bloomfield Little Italy Days?

On Saturday and Sunday, when Liberty Avenue is closed from Taylor Street to Gross Street, a charter bus uses Taylor Street at Liberty Avenue for the western festival entrance or approaches from Gross Street at the eastern end. Both put your group steps from the festival on roads that remain open during the closure. On Thursday and Friday, Liberty Avenue is still open to vehicle traffic, which gives a bus more flexibility to drop closer to the festival's center.

When you book with Party Buses Pittsburgh, the exact drop point is confirmed for your specific festival day, since approach routes are verified in advance.

Is there free parking at Little Italy Days?

Yes, the festival provides several free parking options: UPMC Luna Garage (5111 Baum Blvd, with a free shuttle on Saturday and Sunday), Liberty & Aspen garage, UPMC Aiken Ave garage (520 S. Aiken Ave), Center Ave garage (5200 Center Ave), and UPMC Urgent Care lot (5231 Center Ave). On Saturday afternoon, the most convenient garages fill up quickly. Residential permit blocks throughout the surrounding neighborhood are not available to festival visitors.

For a group of 10 or more, coordinating everyone across multiple garages is typically more frustrating than a single bus drop-off.

How much does it cost to rent a party bus to Bloomfield Little Italy Days?

Pittsburgh party bus and charter bus rental rates depend on vehicle size, how many hours the bus is reserved, and your festival date. As a guide: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $155–$285/hour; 15–25 passenger minibuses run $155–$320/hour; 30–50 passenger party buses run $295–$500/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $195–$400/hour. Most Little Italy Days trips are booked as 4–6 hour blocks. Party Buses Pittsburgh provides all-inclusive pricing online in under 30 seconds with no hidden costs.

Call 412-894-0966 or use our online tool for the exact number for your group.

When does Liberty Avenue close for Little Italy Days?

Liberty Avenue closes from Taylor Street to Gross Street on Saturday at 10:00 a.m. and does not reopen until Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Additional street closures affect Saphire Way, Pearl Street sections, Garnet Way, Cedarville Street sections, State Way, and Edmond Street sections. Taylor Street, Mathilda Street, and Millvale Avenue remain open and are the recommended approach routes — these are the same roads a charter bus uses to reach the festival perimeter drop-off points.

Does the festival run a shuttle service?

Yes, on Saturday and Sunday only. Free parking at UPMC Luna Garage (5111 Baum Blvd) comes with a shuttle that drops passengers two blocks from the festival's east entrance on Gross Street. The shuttle is a convenient option for individuals and couples driving to the festival.

For groups of 10 or more, a private bus covers the same ground without requiring everyone to coordinate across multiple cars on Baum Boulevard during peak festival traffic.

What are the festival hours for Little Italy Days?

For the 2026 festival (August 13–16): Thursday, August 13: 5 p.m.–9 p.m.; Friday, August 14: noon–9 p.m.; Saturday, August 15: noon–9 p.m.; Sunday, August 16: noon–5 p.m. The festival is free to attend and runs rain or shine. Confirm current hours on the official Little Italy Days website before attending, as the 2026 schedule is confirmed at announcement.

Can a charter bus do a multi-stop pickup across Pittsburgh neighborhoods?

Yes. A bus can swing by multiple pickup points — a home in Squirrel Hill, an office in Oakland, a hotel in the Cultural District — on the way to Bloomfield. Multi-stop pickups are common for group outings where attendees are scattered across the city.

When you book, give us the full list of pickup locations and times and we will sequence the route so the bus is always moving toward the festival rather than backtracking.

How far in advance should I book a bus for Little Italy Days?

By June, ideally. Saturday slots during Pittsburgh's summer event season fill earlier than most groups expect — graduation weekends and summer corporate outings book up the same Saturday supply. A Little Italy Days booking is competing with weddings, South Side events, and North Shore game days for the same vehicles on the same weekends.

The group that calls in early June secures the right-size vehicle at the best available rate. The group that calls in the third week of July takes what is left. Call 412-894-0966 as soon as your headcount is confirmed.

What happens to the bus while our group is at the festival?

The bus is reserved as a block of hours, so it can wait nearby — on a side street off the festival perimeter or at a nearby area — and come back to the agreed-upon drop-off point when your group is ready to leave. You set the pickup window with our team in advance so there is no hunting for the bus at the end of the night. For groups staying the full festival day, a pickup window of 8:30–9 p.m. on Saturday (or 4:30–5 p.m. on Sunday) works cleanly with the festival's closing hours.

Book Your Little Italy Days Bus Today

Bloomfield Little Italy Days is four days, three stages, 100,000 people, and more Italian food than any group can eat in a single sitting. The festival itself is effortless — free admission, open streets, food everywhere, bocce going on Saturday afternoon. The only friction is getting there and back.

A Pittsburgh party bus rental takes that friction away completely: your group assembles at one pickup point, arrives at the festival perimeter together, and gets picked up at the same spot whenever the night ends. No garage hunting, no group splitting across five cars, no one drawing straws to stay sober.

Party Buses Pittsburgh has access to a fleet of party buses, minibuses, charter buses, and Sprinter limos across Pittsburgh — the right vehicle for a group of 10 heading to Bloomfield on a Thursday night and the right vehicle for 50 people attending a family reunion on Saturday. Give us a call any time at 412-894-0966 for an all-inclusive price quote in under 30 seconds, or use our online tool for instant availability. Book by June and the right vehicle is yours.

Call after July and you are working with what is left.