Editorial cover image for a VIP talent travel checklist article, showing a professional travel coordinator in a luxury hotel lobby holding a smartphone and red folder, with luggage and planning materials in the background.

VIP Talent Travel Checklist:A Practical Guide for Assistants & Junior Coordinators

Anticipate the Questions Before They Become Problems

If you’re coordinating travel for VIP talent, your role isn’t just booking; it’s anticipating. Most issues don’t happen because something wasn’t done. They happen because something wasn’t thought through far enough in advance. The reality is you’re often not on-site when things go wrong so your job is to plan in a way where:

  • No one needs to ask questions
  • No one is stuck figuring things out
  • Everything already has a clear answer

Below are 5 key areas to think through, with how to approach each one proactively.

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Who Is Traveling and What Do They Actually Need?

This is the most common place where mistakes begin. You are not booking for “a group.” You are booking for individual people with different roles and expectations.

Think through:

  • Talent
  • Assistant
  • Manager/agent
  • Glam (hair, makeup, stylist)
  • Security
  • Additional guests (family, friends)
Red clipboard checklist icon with checkmarks, representing travel details that need to be clarified before confirming VIP travel arrangements.

What to clarify:

  • Who gets business class vs economy
  • Who needs flexibility vs fixed schedules
  • Who may extend or change plans
  • Who needs to stay close to talent
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Why this matters:

If everyone is treated the same, you either overspend or create friction

If you separate needs correctly, the trip runs more smoothly without constant adjustments

Frenchway Pro Tip

Build for flexibility, not perfection. Plans will change, assume they will. Secure flexibility where it matters most (key travelers, critical timing).
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Flights: Plan for Changes, Not Just Departures

Booking the “best flight” is not the goal. Booking a flight that can handle changes is.

Red travel flexibility icon showing an airplane ticket with circular arrows, representing adjustable bookings and flexible travel planning.

Think through:

  • Will this person need to change their return?
  • Are arrivals aligned with key moments (fittings, rehearsals, events)?
  • Are travelers coming from different locations?
Red icon showing a flight checklist with boarding pass, seat, and meal symbols, representing details to confirm before booking VIP flights.

What to confirm:

  • Flexibility (refundable vs changeable tickets)
  • Seat assignments (especially for talent)
  • Airline preferences/loyalty programs
  • Special meal requests
Red icon showing a shield with a checkmark and airplane, representing smooth and well-managed VIP flight coordination.

Why this matters:

Flights are where most last-minute costs and stress come from

If you plan only for the initial schedule, you will likely need to fix it later

Frenchway Pro Tip

Over-communicate the essentials Send the key details clearly: Flights, hotel, and driver info. Travelers should never have to search for basic information.
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Hotels: Think Like It’s a Workspace, Not Just a Stay

hôtel for VIP talent is not just for sleeping. It’s where:
Prep happens, Meetings happen, Teams move in and out

Red icon showing a hotel room with bed, lounge chair, laptop, lamp, and garment hanger, representing a VIP hotel space used for prep, meetings, and work.

Think through:

  • Does talent need a suite?
  • Will multiple people need access to the room?
  • Is there space for fittings or prep?
Red icon showing a hotel checklist with room access card, key, and payment card, representing VIP hotel arrangements prepared in advance.

What to arrange in advance:

  • Room type (suite vs standard)
  • Connecting or nearby rooms for the team
  • Alias name if privacy is needed
  • Credit card on file for incidentals

Why this matters:

If not planned, talent or team members will be stopped at check-in. Someone will be asked to pay out-of-pocket

If planned properly, everything feels seamless from arrival

 

Editorial image for a VIP talent travel checklist article, showing a professional coordinator checking a luxury hotel suite before arrival with a phone, folder, luggage, and garment rack in the background.
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Transportation: Control the First and Last Impression

Transportation is where the experience becomes real. This is often the first moment the traveler interacts with the trip.

Red icon showing a car, airplane, train, luggage, route line, and location pins, representing VIP transportation planning across different arrival points.

Think through:

  • Are arrivals staggered?
  • Are people coming from different airports or train stations?
  • Is luggage volume a factor?
Red icon showing a transportation checklist with phone, driver, car, and location pin, representing driver details and pickup instructions confirmed before arrival day.

What to confirm (before arrival day):

  • Driver name
  • Phone number
  • Vehicle type
  • Pickup instructions
Red icon showing a premium car, hotel building, route path, and shield with checkmark, representing smooth and secure VIP transportation arrival.

Why this matters:

If unclear: Travelers don’t know who to look for, drivers miss pickups, and you get urgent calls

If confirmed: The arrival feels effortless

Frenchway Pro Tip

Think of your role as removing decisions from the traveler. If they have to ask who pays, where the driver is, or whether a flight can change, that means the plan has a gap.
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Payments: Eliminate Friction Before It Happens

This is one of the biggest issues assistants run into. Not because it’s complicated, but because it wasn’t clearly structured.

Red icon showing a wallet, payment card, airplane, hotel, luggage, and service symbols, representing planning who pays for VIP travel expenses.

Think through:

Who is paying for:  

  • Vols
  • Hôtels
  • Incidentals
  • Extras (bags, meals, transport)
Red icon showing a payment checklist with hotel tag, key card, and credit card, representing payment methods and expense structure set up in advance.

What to set up:

  • Credit card on file for hotels
  • Clear instructions on what is covered
  • Backup plan for expenses (reimbursement or pre-funded card)
Red icon showing a hotel, wallet, payment card, and shield with checkmark, representing secure and friction-free VIP travel payments.

Why this matters:

If not handled: Travelers use personal funds, you spend time fixing reimbursement, and accounting gets messy

If handled in advance: No one needs to think about payment during the trip

Final Thought

The best travel coordination is invisible.
If you’ve done your job well:

  • No one asks questions
  • No one encounters friction
  • Everything just works

That only happens when the planning is done with intention, not assumption.

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Frenchway works alongside assistants, PR teams, and production coordinators to structure and manage VIP travel, helping ensure that what’s planned actually works in real-world conditions.

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