Available Inventory 2 months out

Nikkimouse44

Mouseketeer
Joined
Dec 22, 2023
Messages
214
I looked over the weekend and it looked like there were A LOT of cabins available on my sailing of the Wish end of January (close to 150-ish). Are those really "available" or will the guarantee stateroom bookings get put into those rooms at check-in?
Trying to see how full this sailing will be, I am nervous about check-in and PAT!
 
Port Canaveral and Port Everglades sailings are full, pretty much always. When a ship doesn't fill up, Disney will offer last-minute discounts to cast members and those get snatched up fairly quickly. This isn't always the case in Galveston, Europe, Alaska, etc. where there isn't a huge CM population to draw from.

You already mentioned Guaranteed staterooms, that's part of why you see availability. The other factor is that the ship can reach *passenger* capacity before every stateroom is sold. This is the factor that determines how full the ship feels. Every room full of 2 people is a lot less crowded than family rooms full of 5 people. Shorter sailings tend to have more small kids, meaning more people per stateroom.
 
You can't know the actual inventory of a ship with 100% certainty because it is a business secret. You can estimate based on the currently available cabins, but some inventory might be reserved for unsold group trips. Some inventory might be sold at last minute discount. Only DCL upper management knows for sure!

Due to very high fixed costs of a voyage (fuel and staff), the ship only makes a profit when full. DCL will try hard to fill every cabin even at a deep discount. The profit comes from everything that you buy on the ship, especially alcoholic drinks. Profit centers like the bars and specialty restaurants must make their drink quotas or face intervention from management! It is all part of the cruise "game" that you must play or politely refuse and let someone else contribute to cruise line profits.


-Paul
 
Due to very high fixed costs of a voyage (fuel and staff), the ship only makes a profit when full. DCL will try hard to fill every cabin even at a deep discount. The profit comes from everything that you buy on the ship, especially alcoholic drinks. Profit centers like the bars and specialty restaurants must make their drink quotas or face intervention from management! It is all part of the cruise "game" that you must play or politely refuse and let someone else contribute to cruise line profits.
True, but much less true of Disney than other cruise lines. Disney sells way less alcohol, and has no onboard casino.

The other factor to consider is the crew. Full ships mean full dining rooms which means full gratuities for the servers. This helps attract and retain the highest quality crew members.
 

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