Private Airport Greeter vs Airline Special Assistance in India: What's the Difference?
If your airline already provides free wheelchair and special assistance, why would anyone pay for a private airport greeter in India? It's a fair question — and the honest answer is that they are two different things that are easy to confuse. One is a free, mandated safety service run by the airline. The other is a paid, personal concierge service run independently. This guide explains exactly where they overlap, where they differ, and how to decide which you actually need.
The short answer
Airline special assistance is a free service the airline is legally required to provide — primarily wheelchair support and help for passengers with reduced mobility, from check-in to the aircraft seat. It is run by the airline and airport ground staff.
A private airport greeter (also called meet & greet) is a paid service run by an independent concierge company. A dedicated person is assigned only to you — meeting you at the aircraft door or kerb, handling porters, escorting you through immigration and baggage, and staying with you until you're in your car.
They are not competitors so much as different tools. Many families book both: airline wheelchair assistance *and* a private greeter to manage everything around it.
What airline special assistance covers
When you request special assistance from your airline (usually a "wheelchair" or "SSR" code added to your booking), you get:
- A wheelchair and an attendant at departure, from check-in to the aircraft door
- Priority boarding
- On arrival, a wheelchair from the aircraft to the arrivals hall
- It is free — airlines cannot charge for it
That's genuinely valuable, and for many elderly or mobility-limited passengers it's enough. But it has real limits that catch people out:
- It's shared, not dedicated. One attendant often manages several passengers at once, so there can be waits — sometimes long ones at peak times.
- It ends at the arrivals hall. Once you're past the wheelchair drop-off point, you're on your own for baggage, the taxi queue, and finding your driver.
- It doesn't include a porter, fast-track, or lounge. Baggage is your responsibility.
- It can be inconsistent. Availability and quality vary by airport, airline, and how busy the shift is.
What a private airport greeter covers
A private greeter is assigned to you and only you. At a busy airport like Delhi (DEL), the difference is stark. The service typically includes:
- Meeting you at the aircraft door (international) or the gate/kerb — not the arrivals hall
- A dedicated escort through immigration, including fast-track immigration where available
- A porter who handles all your baggage from the belt to your car
- Guidance through customs
- Walking you to your waiting driver or transfer car
- Optional lounge access
- Real-time WhatsApp updates to a family member (often the reason NRI families book it for parents)
The value isn't only speed — it's that one accountable person removes every decision and every wait from the experience.
Side-by-side comparison
| Feature | Airline Special Assistance | Private Greeter (Meet & Greet) |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Free | Paid (from ₹899) |
| Who runs it | Airline / airport ground staff | Independent concierge company |
| Dedicated to you? | No — shared attendant | Yes — one person for you only |
| Where they meet you | Check-in / aircraft door | Aircraft door or kerb |
| Where the service ends | Arrivals hall (wheelchair drop) | Your car / driver |
| Porter for baggage | Not included | Included |
| Fast-track immigration | Not included | Included where available |
| Lounge access | No | Optional |
| WhatsApp updates to family | No | Yes |
| Works on any airline / class | Only your airline | Yes — all 13 Indian airports, any airline |
| Best for | Mobility support on a budget | Elderly parents, first-time visitors, tight connections, VIP arrivals |
Which one do you actually need?
Choose airline special assistance alone if: the traveller mainly needs a wheelchair, is comfortable managing baggage and the taxi queue (or has family waiting inside), and cost is the priority. It's free and it works.
Choose a private greeter if any of these apply:
- You're an NRI booking for elderly parents travelling alone and want someone accountable end-to-end — see our senior citizen airport assistance
- It's someone's first time arriving in India and the terminal chaos is a real concern
- There's a tight connection or an inter-terminal transfer
- You want baggage handled, the queue skipped, and a confirmed car — not a scramble at the kerb
- You want a WhatsApp confirmation that they've landed safely and are in the car
Book both if: the traveller needs a wheelchair *and* you want the full end-to-end escort. The private greeter coordinates with the airline's wheelchair service so nothing falls between the two.
A note on honesty
We run private greeter services, so it's fair to ask if we're biased. Here's our honest position: if all your parent needs is a wheelchair and a relative is waiting inside the arrivals hall, the free airline service is perfectly good — don't pay for what you don't need. The private greeter earns its fee when the airline's service ends too early, waits too long, or leaves the hardest part (baggage, customs, the car, the reassurance) unsolved. Book based on the actual gap, not the fear.
Frequently asked questions
Is airline special assistance really free in India? Yes. Airlines are required to provide wheelchair and mobility assistance at no charge. You request it when booking or up to 48 hours before the flight. A private greeter is a separate, paid service.
Can I use a private greeter if I've flown economy? Yes. Unlike airline business-class perks, a private greeter is independent of your airline and cabin class. An economy passenger gets exactly the same meet & greet as anyone else.
Will a private greeter interfere with the airline's wheelchair service? No — they coordinate with it. Your greeter accompanies the wheelchair attendant so the traveller is never handed off to a stranger, and picks up everything (baggage, car) that the airline service doesn't cover.
Does a private greeter replace fast-track immigration? It usually includes it. See fast-track immigration for how the priority lane works at Indian airports.
How much does a private greeter cost in India? Porter service starts around ₹899; meet & assist from ₹1,180 at major airports. See current pricing for your airport.
If you're deciding for an elderly parent, a first-time visitor, or a tight arrival, a private greeter is the one thing worth booking in advance.
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