Angiography is critical for visualizing cerebral blood flow in intracranial steno-occlusive diseases. Current 4D magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) techniques primarily focus on macrovascular structures, yet few have quantified hemodynamic timing. This study introduces a novel model to estimate macrovascular arterial transit time (mATT) derived from arterial spin labeling (ASL)-based 4D-MRA. We provide examples of our method that visualize mATT differences throughout the brain of patients with intracranial steno-occlusive disease (moyamoya), as well as changes in mATT resulting from the cerebrovascular reactivity response to an acetazolamide (ACZ) injection. Furthermore, we present a method that projects sparse arterial signals into a 3D native brain-region atlas space and correlates regional mATT with other hemodynamic parameters of interest, such as tissue transit time and cerebrovascular reactivity. This approach offers a non-invasive, quantitative assessment of macrovascular dynamics, with potential to enhance understanding of large-vessel and tissue-level hemodynamics and augment monitoring of treatment outcomes in steno-occlusive disease patients. Furthermore, it sets the stage for more in-depth investigations of the macrovascular contribution to brain hemodynamics.