Any advice for rebooking onboard? This our first
DCL cruise, but we are quite certain that we will love it.
We are considering a 2011 Alaskan cruise. Is it best to come onboard with a quote from a
travel agent or does it not matter?
Thanks!!
Kristi
We've rebooked onboard every chance we've had!
It's best to do as much research as possible beforehand to help speed up the process while onboard. The "Future Cruise Desk" has very limited hours, and there's always a line of people waiting to rebook, especially on Saturday evening! In fact, here's what the latest 3-night Navigators list for Future Cruise Desk Hours:
Thursday 7pm-8:30pm
Friday 9am-10am; 4pm-6pm; 7:30pm-8:30pm
Saturday 8:30am-9:30am; 3:30pm-6pm; 7:30pm-11pm
They also have large "price quote" cards near the desk that you can fill out and put in a slot if you don't want to wait in line. They will fill it out and put it on your "silver fish clip" outside your cabin door. They also sometimes follow up with a phone message in your cabin.
You are able to book as many cabins as you have people sailing onboard for the discount and OBC. This was an issue for us once as we were planning a big cruise gathering a couple of years ago - we needed to book 6 cabins, but only DH and I were sailing over spring break that year, so we could only book 2 cabins with the discount and OBC and the other 4 cabins at full price. However, we were also sailing again three months later, this time with our two kids, so we were finally able to book the 4 cabins with the discount and OBC. This cruise, DH and I are planning to book two cabins, but on two different sailing dates: next spring break and a dummy date for a future sailing yet to be determined.
Here's what I've already done:
*Chosen my cruise dates
*Chosen cabin category, preferred deck level, and preferred cabin locations
*Researched prices for those dates and cabin categories
*Determined which dining we want (Main or Late)
*Typed up all of our information so we can just hand it over to the agent. Here's what they need: full names, addresses, and birthdates. You can add passport numbers later. If you're planning to book more than one cabin, separate the info by who's staying in which cabin.
I think the current discount is 10%, and here are the
Castaway Club level OBC credits for rebooking onboard:
Silver $100 for 3-6nt cruises; $200 for 7nt or longer cruises
Gold $150 for 3-6nt cruises; $275 for 7nt or longer cruises
Platinum $250 for 3-6nt cruises; $350 for 7nt or longer cruises
Some OBCs can be combined, but some cannot, and that can be very confusing. From what I've experienced, the rule of thumb seems to be that "Disney" only grants one OBC per cabin, and "Disney" includes the Disney VISA credit card. Outside
travel agency OBCs seem to be able to be added to anything. Here's my best OBC understanding (and I definitely could still have this all confused, so be sure to check when booking):
DCL OBC cannot be combined with Disney VISA OBC
DCL OBC can be combined with outside travel agency OBC
For our last three cruises, we've booked onboard, made sure everything was just the way we wanted it, and then turned our reservations over to
Dreams Unlimited 2-3 weeks before the final payments were due to take advantage of their fantastic OBC offers.
I hope this info helps. Gee, I just realized I never have "short answers" to anyone's questions.
Advice? Oh boy do I have some advice!
Hopefully I'm not confusing anyone! Maybe I need to be challenged... such as "Please answer the following question in 20 words or less."
