How to Compare Cruise Prices Accurately (Apples to Apples)
A Complete Guide to Understanding True Cruise Costs and Making Fair Comparisons
Introduction: The Comparison Problem
You are shopping for a cruise. You find what looks like a great deal: $799 per person for a 7-night Caribbean voyage. Then you find another option: $1,299 per person for a similar itinerary. The first one seems obviously better—$500 cheaper per person, $1,000 for a couple.
But is it really cheaper?
The $799 cruise might not include drinks, WiFi, specialty dining, or gratuities. The $1,299 cruise might include all of these. When you add everything up, the “expensive” cruise could actually cost less than the “cheap” one.
Cruise pricing is notoriously complex. Base fares tell only part of the story. Taxes, fees, inclusions, cabin categories, itineraries, and onboard costs all affect the true price. Comparing cruises based on advertised rates is like comparing cars based on sticker price without considering features, fuel efficiency, or maintenance costs.
This article is going to teach you how to compare cruise prices accurately. We will break down every component that affects true cost, provide frameworks for fair comparison, identify common pricing traps, and help you understand which cruise actually delivers better value. By the end, you will be able to see through marketing prices to real costs.
Understanding Cruise Price Components
A cruise’s true cost comprises multiple elements beyond the advertised fare.
The Base Fare
The headline price you see in advertisements and search results is typically the base fare—the cost for the cabin and basic cruise amenities. This includes:
- Your stateroom
- Main dining room meals
- Buffet and casual dining
- Entertainment (shows, activities, pools)
- Access to fitness facilities
- Port visits (though not shore excursions)
The base fare does not include many things you might assume are part of a cruise vacation.
Taxes, Fees, and Port Charges
Added to the base fare are mandatory government taxes and port charges. These vary by itinerary but typically add $100-300 per person for a week-long cruise.
Some cruise lines include these in advertised prices; others show them separately. When comparing, ensure you are looking at the same thing: fare-only versus fare-plus-taxes.
Gratuities/Service Charges
Most cruise lines charge daily gratuities automatically, typically $15-25 per person per day. A 7-night cruise adds $105-175 per person in gratuities alone.
Some inclusive fares cover gratuities. Others charge them separately. This difference can swing comparison by hundreds of dollars.
Beverage Costs
Unless you drink only water, coffee, and juice at meals, beverages cost extra on most cruises:
- Soda packages: $10-15 per day
- Alcoholic beverage packages: $60-100+ per day
- Individual drinks: $8-15 each for cocktails and specialty coffees
A couple who drinks moderately might spend $500-1,000+ on beverages during a week-long cruise if not covered by an inclusive fare.
WiFi and Connectivity
Cruise ship WiFi is notoriously expensive when purchased separately:
- Basic packages: $15-25 per day
- Streaming packages: $25-40 per day
- Per-minute or per-megabyte: Unpredictably expensive
For a week-long cruise, WiFi can add $100-280+ per person. Inclusive fares often cover WiFi; basic fares do not.
Specialty Dining
Main dining rooms are included, but specialty restaurants charge fees:
- Cover charges: $30-75 per person per meal
- Prix fixe menus: $50-150 per person
- Chef’s tables and premium experiences: $100-300+ per person
Travelers who enjoy one or two specialty meals add $60-300 per person to their cruise cost.
Shore Excursions
Port visits are included, but organized excursions are not:
- Basic tours: $50-100 per person
- Adventure activities: $100-200 per person
- Premium experiences: $200-500+ per person
A week-long cruise with 4-5 ports might involve $200-1,000+ per person in excursion costs.
Other Onboard Spending
Additional costs that vary by traveler:
- Spa treatments: $100-400 per treatment
- Casino gambling: Variable
- Shopping: Variable
- Photos: $100-300 for packages
- Specialty entertainment: $20-50 per show/experience
- Laundry: $3-8 per item or packages available
Building a True Cost Comparison
To compare cruises accurately, calculate the complete cost for each option.
Step 1: Start With the All-In Fare
Find the fare that includes taxes, fees, and port charges. This is your baseline.
If the fare is quoted without taxes/fees, add them. Cruise lines are required to show total price during checkout, so you can verify the complete fare.
Step 2: Identify What Is Included
For each cruise option, note exactly what is covered:
Beverages: None, non-alcoholic only, standard alcoholic, premium alcoholic?
Gratuities: Included, prepaid option available, charged separately?
WiFi: Included, included at what level, not included?
Specialty dining: Included, credit amount, not included?
Excursions: Included, credit amount, not included?
Create a comparison chart with all inclusions marked.
Step 3: Estimate Your Actual Consumption
Be realistic about what you will actually spend if items are not included:
- How much will you drink?
- Will you buy WiFi?
- How many specialty meals will you have?
- What shore excursions will you book?
Base this on your actual travel patterns, not aspirational behavior.
Step 4: Calculate Total Cost
For non-inclusive fares: Base fare + taxes/fees + estimated gratuities + estimated beverages + estimated WiFi + estimated dining + estimated excursions = Total estimated cost
For inclusive fares: All-in fare (already includes most/all of above)
Step 5: Compare Totals, Not Base Fares
The cruise with the lower base fare may have the higher total cost. The cruise with the higher base fare may deliver better value.
Only total-to-total comparison reveals truth.
The Per-Night Calculation
Different cruise lengths complicate comparison. A 5-night cruise at $699 and a 7-night cruise at $899 cannot be compared directly.
Calculate Per-Night Cost
Total estimated cost ÷ Number of nights = Per-night cost
This normalizes different lengths for fair comparison.
Include Pre/Post Travel
If one cruise requires flights and another departs from a drivable port, include transportation costs:
Total cruise cost + flights + hotels + ground transport = Total trip cost
Total trip cost ÷ Number of vacation nights = Per-night trip cost
A “cheap” cruise requiring expensive flights might cost more per night than an “expensive” cruise near home.
Account for Sea Days vs. Port Days
Itineraries with more port days typically offer more value—more destinations, more variety, more reasons you chose a cruise over a resort.
An 8-night cruise with 6 port days might be better value than a 7-night cruise with 4 port days, even at slightly higher cost.
Cabin Category Comparisons
Comparing different cabin types requires understanding what you are trading.
Inside vs. Outside vs. Balcony vs. Suite
Inside cabins: No window, smallest, lowest price. Perfect for travelers who use cabins only for sleeping.
Outside/Ocean View: Window or porthole providing natural light. Modest premium over inside.
Balcony: Private outdoor space. Significant premium but qualitatively different experience.
Suite: Larger space, premium amenities, often concierge service and additional perks.
Fair Comparison Requires Same Category
Comparing an inside cabin on one cruise to a balcony on another is not fair comparison. The experiences differ significantly.
For accurate comparison, match cabin categories: inside to inside, balcony to balcony, suite to suite.
When Category Differences Matter
If you are deciding between cabin types, estimate the value of differences:
Balcony value: How much is a private outdoor space worth to you? Sitting on your balcony with morning coffee, watching the ship arrive in port, evening stargazing?
Suite value: What premium amenities are included? Priority boarding, specialty restaurant access, butler service, larger space?
Calculate whether the premium for better cabins delivers value matching its cost.
Location Within Categories
Even within categories, location matters:
Midship: Less motion, closer to amenities Forward/Aft: More motion but potentially better views Higher decks: Less noise from public areas Near elevators: Convenient but potentially noisier
Identical categories at different locations may have different prices. Compare like locations.
Cruise Line Style and Value
Different cruise lines offer different included experiences, affecting value comparisons.
Contemporary/Mass Market Lines
Examples: Carnival, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian, MSC
Typically included: Main dining, buffets, basic entertainment, pools, fitness
Typically extra: Drinks, specialty dining, WiFi, gratuities (sometimes), excursions
Per-night base fares: $100-250 per person
Premium Lines
Examples: Celebrity, Holland America, Princess
Typically included: Higher-quality main dining, more refined entertainment, some additional amenities
Typically extra: Drinks, specialty dining (though some meals may be included), WiFi, excursions
Per-night base fares: $150-400 per person
Luxury Lines
Examples: Regent Seven Seas, Silversea, Seabourn, Oceania (upper tier)
Typically included: All beverages, specialty dining, gratuities, WiFi, shore excursions (varies), suite-level accommodations
Typically extra: Premium excursions, spa, casino
Per-night base fares: $400-1,500+ per person
Comparing Across Market Segments
A luxury cruise at $800/night all-inclusive might equal a contemporary cruise at $150/night plus $400/night in add-ons plus the “cost” of lower service quality.
The luxury cruise is more expensive in absolute terms but might be comparable in total value.
However, if you would not purchase those add-ons anyway, the contemporary cruise delivers better value for your preferences.
Match cruise line style to your consumption patterns.
Promotional Pricing Analysis
Sales and promotions complicate comparison but can provide genuine value.
Types of Cruise Promotions
Rate reductions: Straightforward lower prices on base fares
Onboard credit: “Book now, receive $500 OBC.” Effectively a discount on onboard spending
Included perks: “Free drinks package” or “Free WiFi” bundled with booking
Reduced deposits: Lower initial commitment, not affecting total price
Kids sail free: Children’s fares waived or reduced
Calculating Promotion Value
Rate reduction: Direct value—exactly what you save
Onboard credit: Value depends on whether you would spend that amount anyway. $500 OBC has $500 value only if you would spend $500 onboard.
Included perks: Value is the retail price of included items (drinks package, WiFi, dining credits) that you would otherwise purchase.
Kids sail free: Value is the children’s fare you would otherwise pay.
Comparing Promotional Offers
Different promotions are not equally valuable:
- 20% off base fare
- $300 onboard credit
- Free drinks package
Calculate each in dollars and compare:
- 20% off $1,500 = $300 savings
- $300 OBC = $300 if you would spend that anyway
- Drinks package at $70/day × 7 days = $490 value if you would buy it
The drinks package is worth most for a drinker, but worth nothing for someone who would not purchase it.
Stacking Promotions
Some promotions combine; others do not. Clarify before assuming you can receive multiple discounts.
Common Comparison Traps
Avoid these errors that distort cruise price comparisons.
Comparing Fare-Only to Fare-Plus-Taxes
One cruise advertises “$699” (plus $200 in taxes). Another advertises “$879” (taxes included). They are actually the same price, but the first looks cheaper.
Always compare total fare including all mandatory charges.
Ignoring Gratuity Differences
A $100/night cruise charging $18/day gratuities separately costs the same as a $118/night cruise with gratuities included.
Some travelers mistakenly think they are saving money with the lower base fare.
Comparing Different Cabin Categories
An inside cabin at $150/night is not comparable to a balcony at $250/night. They are different products.
Ignoring Beverage Consumption Patterns
A $130/night cruise without drinks and a $200/night cruise with drinks are equal for heavy drinkers but not for non-drinkers.
Match comparison to your actual consumption.
Forgetting Transportation Costs
A $100/night cruise requiring $800 in flights costs $214/night over 7 nights when you include flights.
A $150/night cruise from a drivable port might be cheaper total.
Comparing Different Itineraries
A 7-night Western Caribbean cruise and a 7-night Alaska cruise serve different purposes. Compare cruises to similar destinations unless your goal is purely shipboard experience.
Overlooking Ship Age and Quality
A newer ship might justify premium pricing. An older ship might deliver identical experience at lower cost. Or an older ship might feel dated and provide less value.
Research ship quality, not just price.
Creating Your Comparison Spreadsheet
Build a structured comparison tool.
Column Headers
Cruise identification:
- Cruise line
- Ship
- Departure date
- Itinerary (ports)
- Number of nights
- Number of port days
Cabin details:
- Cabin category
- Cabin location
- Square footage (if important to you)
Pricing breakdown:
- Base fare per person
- Taxes and fees per person
- Total fare per person
- Total fare for party
Inclusions:
- Gratuities (included/amount/not included)
- Beverages (what level included)
- WiFi (what level included)
- Specialty dining (amount/not included)
- Shore excursions (amount/not included)
- Other (loyalty perks, promotions)
Estimated additional costs:
- Gratuities if not included
- Beverages if not included or exceeding inclusion
- WiFi if not included
- Specialty dining planned
- Shore excursions planned
- Other anticipated onboard spending
Totals:
- Total estimated cost per person
- Total estimated cost for party
- Per-night cost per person
- Per-night cost for party
Transportation:
- Flights/driving
- Pre-cruise hotel
- Post-cruise hotel
- Total trip cost
Using the Spreadsheet
Fill in all columns for each cruise option. Compare totals, not just base fares. The spreadsheet forces accurate comparison by ensuring you account for all cost components.
Real Examples: Accurate Comparison in Practice
The Caribbean Comparison
The Thompson family compared two 7-night Caribbean cruises for their family of four:
Option A (Contemporary line):
- Base fare: $699 per person ($2,796)
- Taxes/fees: $180 per person ($720)
- Gratuities: $126 per person ($504)
- Drinks estimate (moderate): $400 per person ($1,600)
- WiFi: $150 per person ($600)
- Excursions: $200 per person ($800)
- Total: $7,020 / 7 nights = $1,003/night for family
Option B (Premium line, inclusive promotion):
- All-in fare with drinks, WiFi, gratuities: $1,199 per person ($4,796)
- Excursions: $200 per person ($800)
- Total: $5,596 / 7 nights = $799/night for family
The “expensive” Option B was actually $1,424 cheaper and $204/night less.
The Alaska Comparison
Jennifer compared Alaska cruises from two departure points:
Option A (Seattle departure):
- Cruise fare: $1,599
- Taxes/fees: $250
- Flight from home: $0 (drivable)
- Total cruise cost: $1,849
Option B (Vancouver departure):
- Cruise fare: $1,399
- Taxes/fees: $300
- Flight from home: $450
- Total cruise cost: $2,149
The “cheaper” Vancouver cruise cost $300 more when including transportation.
The Suite Question
Michael debated cabin categories on a Mediterranean cruise:
Balcony cabin:
- Fare: $2,800
- Gratuities: $175
- No additional inclusions
- Total: $2,975
Suite:
- Fare: $4,500
- Gratuities: $225 (higher rate for suites)
- Includes: $500 specialty dining credit, priority boarding, butler service, larger space
- Total: $4,725
Suite premium: $1,750
Value of inclusions to Michael: $500 dining + estimated $200 for priority/butler + value of extra space
Michael concluded the suite was not worth the premium for his preferences, though someone valuing space and premium service might reach a different conclusion.
20 Powerful and Uplifting Travel Quotes to Inspire Your Next Journey
- “The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page.” — Saint Augustine
- “Travel is the only thing you buy that makes you richer.” — Anonymous
- “Adventure is worthwhile in itself.” — Amelia Earhart
- “Not all those who wander are lost.” — J.R.R. Tolkien
- “Life is short and the world is wide.” — Simon Raven
- “To travel is to live.” — Hans Christian Andersen
- “Take only memories, leave only footprints.” — Chief Seattle
- “The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.” — Lao Tzu
- “Traveling – it leaves you speechless, then turns you into a storyteller.” — Ibn Battuta
- “Once a year, go someplace you’ve never been before.” — Dalai Lama
- “We travel not to escape life, but for life not to escape us.” — Anonymous
- “Jobs fill your pocket, but adventures fill your soul.” — Jaime Lyn Beatty
- “Travel makes one modest. You see what a tiny place you occupy in the world.” — Gustave Flaubert
- “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.” — Marcel Proust
- “Don’t tell me how educated you are, tell me how much you have traveled.” — Mohammed
- “Travel far enough, you meet yourself.” — David Mitchell
- “Life begins at the end of your comfort zone.” — Neale Donald Walsch
- “A journey is best measured in friends, rather than miles.” — Tim Cahill
- “Own only what you can always carry with you.” — Alexander Solzhenitsyn
- “Wherever you go, go with all your heart.” — Confucius
Picture This
Let yourself step into this moment of clarity.
You are sitting at your computer with two cruise options open in different browser tabs. They are similar itineraries—same region, same number of nights, similar ports. But the prices look different. One shows $899 per person. The other shows $1,399 per person.
The $899 cruise seems like the obvious winner. Why would you pay $500 more per person—$1,000 more for a couple—for essentially the same trip?
But you have learned to look deeper.
You open a spreadsheet and start entering data. The $899 cruise: base fare plus $200 in taxes, plus gratuities charged separately at $126 per person, plus no drinks included, plus no WiFi included. You estimate your beverage spending based on past trips: $450 per person for the week. WiFi: $150 per person.
You add it up: $899 + $200 + $126 + $450 + $150 = $1,825 per person. For two people: $3,650.
Now the $1,399 cruise. You check what is included: taxes already in the price, gratuities included, drinks package included, WiFi included. Shore excursions are not included, but neither are they in the other option.
Total for the $1,399 cruise for two people: $2,798.
You stare at the numbers. The “expensive” cruise is actually $852 cheaper than the “cheap” cruise. The marketing price was an illusion. The truth was hidden in what was and was not included.
You think about how easy it would have been to book the $899 cruise, feeling smart about the apparent savings, only to be nickeled and dimed throughout the voyage. You would have spent more and felt worse, watching every drink and calculating every WiFi minute.
Instead, you book the $1,399 cruise. You know you will board with almost everything covered. You will order drinks without counting them. You will stay connected without hesitation. The experience will feel abundant rather than restricted.
The price you see is not the price you pay. The deal that looks good is not always the deal that is good. True comparison requires digging beneath the surface, understanding all the components, and calculating what things actually cost.
Now you know how to compare. And knowing is the difference between overpaying for the illusion of a bargain and finding genuine value.
Share This Article
If this article helped you understand how to compare cruise prices accurately, think about who else might benefit from this clarity. Think about your friend who always books based on the lowest advertised fare without considering what is included. Think about your family member who got surprised by onboard expenses on a cruise that seemed like a great deal. Think about anyone you know who is shopping for cruises and might be comparing apples to oranges.
This article could save them from the trap of misleading price comparisons.
Share it on Facebook and tag someone planning a cruise. Send it in a text to a friend comparing cruise options. Post it on X (formerly Twitter) and share your own pricing discovery stories. Pin it to your cruise planning board on Pinterest where it can help others see through marketing prices. Email it to anyone who might benefit from this comparison framework. Drop it in any cruise community where people ask which cruise is the better deal.
Every share helps another cruiser see through surface prices to true costs.
Visit us at DNDTRAVELS.COM for more cruise guidance, value analysis, and everything you need to make informed booking decisions.
Disclaimer
The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and should not be interpreted as professional financial, travel, or booking advice. All pricing examples, cost breakdowns, and calculations in this article are illustrative estimates based on general knowledge and publicly available information. Actual cruise pricing varies significantly by cruise line, ship, itinerary, cabin category, booking date, and promotional period.
DNDTRAVELS.COM and the authors of this article make no guarantees or warranties, expressed or implied, regarding the accuracy, completeness, reliability, suitability, or timeliness of the information presented. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, compensated by, or officially connected to any cruise line mentioned in this article unless explicitly stated otherwise. The description of any cruise line’s pricing structure or inclusions does not constitute an endorsement or guarantee of current terms.
Cruise pricing, inclusions, taxes, fees, and promotional offers change frequently and vary by cruise line, booking channel, and time of booking. The specific numbers used in examples are for illustration only and should not be relied upon as accurate representations of any cruise line’s current pricing. We strongly recommend that you verify current pricing, inclusions, and terms directly with cruise lines or qualified travel agents before making booking decisions.
Individual cruise costs depend entirely on personal consumption patterns, cabin preferences, and travel requirements. The comparison framework provided is a general approach and may not capture all factors relevant to your specific situation.
By reading and using the information in this article, you acknowledge and agree that DNDTRAVELS.COM, its owners, authors, contributors, partners, and affiliates shall not be held responsible or liable for any booking decisions, pricing surprises, or any other negative outcomes that may arise from your use of or reliance on the content provided herein. You assume full responsibility for your own cruise booking decisions. This article is intended to provide a framework for comparing cruise prices, not to serve as a guarantee of accuracy or a substitute for verifying current terms with cruise lines.



