IAH’s official maps don’t list “Fast Park & Relax” at all
IAH’s own parking page only shows onsite options like Terminal A/B/C/D/E garages and the ecopark lots. “Fast Park & Relax” doesn’t appear on the George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH) site or on the major third‑party airport parking aggregators checked for Houston. That usually means one of two things: the name is outdated, or it’s being confused with another off‑airport economy operator in the IAH area.
Most off‑site economy lots around IAH sit along JFK Boulevard or Will Clayton Parkway, a few minutes’ shuttle ride from Terminals A–E. Rates in this cluster typically run well under the daily garage price at IAH’s terminals, which can reach $30+ per day in peak periods. If you see “Fast Park & Relax” listed at a similar JFK/Will Clayton address with shuttle service to all terminals, treat it as a standard off‑site economy lot, not an official airport product.
IAH’s official economy alternative is ecopark on JFK and ecopark2 off Will Clayton, both with 24/7 shuttles to Terminals A–E. These lots post their rates on fly2houston.com and often undercut the terminal garages by several dollars per day, especially if you book ahead on busy dates like Thanksgiving week or spring break. If a site lists “Fast Park & Relax” at IAH without an exact street address, cross‑check against these named ecopark facilities.
Because no reliable reviews or regular‑use reports surfaced for “Fast Park & Relax” at IAH, treat any listing carefully. Verify three things before you hand over card details: the physical address on Google Maps, shuttle frequency to your target terminal (A through E), and the stated daily rate compared with IAH ecopark. One practical tip: if the lot’s website doesn’t show a Houston phone number with a local area code (713, 281, 346, or 832), assume the listing may be generic and keep shopping.