White-Label Ground Handling in Hawaii — How Operators Run Programs Locally
Key Takeaways
- White-label ground handling means AGT operates the Hawaii ground while your brand stays in front of the client.
- You sell and keep the client; AGT handles arrivals, transportation, rooming, activities, and logistics locally.
- Rates are quoted net or commissionable, so you can package and resell.
- It scales from small groups to multi-island programs, for both US and overseas operators.
- The value is execution: you extend into Hawaii without building a local operation.
The Problem White-Label Ground Handling Solves
A tour operator or advisor can sell Hawaii from anywhere. Running it is the hard part: someone local has to meet the group, dispatch the right vehicles, hold the room block, and make the timed pieces line up — without ever appearing to the client. White-label ground handling is the answer. The operator keeps the sale, the client, and the brand; a local partner carries the execution, invisibly.
This guide explains how that arrangement actually works on the ground, what net and commissionable rates mean for your margin, and how to decide when to use a ground handler instead of trying to run Hawaii yourself.
How White-Label Ground Handling Actually Works
The model is simple to state and detailed to run: you sell it, the local team executes it, and the client only ever sees your brand. On a documented three-island program built for an overseas operator, AGT met the group on arrival, coordinated inter-island flights and baggage continuity, and ran per-island touring with a ground team on each island — all under the operator’s brand. On a separate white-label Oahu program for a US organizer, staggered mainland arrivals from many gateways were met and reconciled into one program, a room block was held and managed, and touring and dining were delivered end to end.
Everything a client would normally attribute to the operator — the greeter, the vehicle, the rooming list, the day-of contact — is carried by the ground handler under the operator’s name. One local operations contact owns the whole ground program, so the operator manages a relationship, not a vendor list.
Operational Tip
Ask a prospective ground handler how they stay invisible — whose name is on the vehicle, the rooming list, and the day-of contact. White-label only works if the client never has to meet the operator behind the curtain.
Net Rates, Commissions, and What You Keep
White-label pricing is usually quoted net — a wholesale rate the operator marks up and resells under its own brand — or commissionable, where the operator earns a set commission on the published price. Net rates give you full control of the client-facing price and margin; commissionable rates are simpler to administer. Either way, the point is that the ground program is priced so you can package and resell it as your own product, in your own market and currency.
Running Hawaii yourself vs. a white-label ground handler
| Factor | Do it yourself, remotely | White-label ground handler |
|---|---|---|
| Local execution | Coordinated from afar | On-the-ground team, single contact |
| Arrivals & dispatch | Your problem in real time | Met and reconciled locally |
| Vehicle & terrain knowledge | Guesswork | Vehicle matched to each route |
| Your brand | Yours | Stays yours — handler is invisible |
| Pricing | Retail vendors | Net or commissionable to resell |
When to Use White-Label — and What to Hand Over
Use a white-label ground handler when you have a Hawaii sale but no Hawaii operation: multi-island programs, groups arriving from many cities, timed activities or cruises, or simply any program where being on the ground matters and you are not. To brief a handler well, hand over the essentials up front and let the local team build from them.
What to give your white-label ground handler
- Your group manifest and flight arrival/departure details.
- The itinerary or the experience you have sold (or want built).
- Rooming requirements and any standard (for example, no bed sharing on student groups).
- Your brand assets, so the client only sees your name.
- The rate basis you need — net or commissionable.
- Any timing dependencies: cruise all-aboard, timed admissions, departure windows.
How AGT Does This in Practice
Related AGT Services & Programs
Prefer to Talk It Through First?
Frequently Asked Questions
What is white-label ground handling?
Do we keep our client relationship and brand?
What does ‘net rate’ mean?
Can you handle multi-island programs?
Do you work with US and overseas operators?
How is a ground handler different from a DMC?
About the Author
Conway Kaka
Extend Into Hawaii Without Building a Local Operation
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