Correct - matching salinity between your QT and transport water eliminates the need to do anything more than temp acclimatation. Drip acclimation can do more harm than good, especially if your livestock comes from an internet supplier (i.e. extended acclimation raises free ammonia to dangerous levels in short time frames). Like Steve noted above, many LFS keep their salinity around 1.017-1.018, so trying to acclimate livestock to "normal" salinity (1.025-1.026) can do irreparable damage to their internal organs, which can't tolerate large swings in osmotic pressure.
Once you have your livestock in a salinity-matched QT, you can raise the salinity slowly (no more than 0.001-0.002 SG per day) over the course of several days. I use SaltyZoo's salinity calculator to do this:
http://www.saltyzoo.com/SaltyCalcs/SalinityAdjust.php Alternatively, if you are doing Tank Transfer to treat for Cryptocaryon, you can raise the salinity by one degree for each transfer, with the final few adjustments during the observation period afterward.