Lisa F
is a very wise woman
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2000
- Messages
- 11,129
This is more to have a discussion than it is really for advice, since I do understand the concept of figuring out what you think you might spend, adding it up and budgeting.
But I was wondering in general how people budget for their onboard spending, and how well you do to sticking to that when you get on board.
Last time I cruised I cruised with my parents and there was no budget, lol, so I didn't really pay attention to anything. They paid for onboard expenses while we paid for the rest of our cruise/transport/trip and were insistent I not think about it, so I didn't! it was only a 4 day cruise and we didn't do any specialty dining, I had the rainforest in advance, Meme bought all of the souveniers and we had a drink or two with dinner every night.
I would like to be able to have a drink when I want it (but traveling as a single mom, I am not planning to walk around the cruise in a drunken stupor either), I would like to do Remy brunch and palo either brunch or dinner and a couple of tastings, I plan to do the rainforest room but I will be buying individual days ahead of time so that will be paid for. I will do port excursions but may not necessarily do them through Disney. I will more than likely say "yes" to popcorn refills and smoothies and premium ice cream treats - I am thinking of making a "coupon book" for this stuff for the kiddo because it will help him with the concept of budgeting as well... one premium sundae for the trip and a bucket of popcorn and a smoothie a day if he wants it. And then of course souvenirs... when we go to WDW I usually give him a budget of $100 that he has to earn before the trip that he can spend on anything (it really quiets down the constant "I wants" when I tell him he can have it if he spends HIS money on it) and then I will buy him one or two nice things for the trip out of my budget (last time we were there at festival of the arts and he got a wall hanging of his name written out graphically like star wars characters... we look for something special like that for his "big" souvenir).
Do people find that they budget and then end up spending wildly above it because it's a cruise and it's vacation? I hate to feel constrained on vacation (I budget pretty tightly the rest of the year) but I also do not have endless funds for a ridiculous onboard bill. How do people balance the two? I have gotten pretty good at budgeting for my WDW vacations so I don't feel deprived but don't have any nasty surprises at the end of the trip either. Cruising is a bit different as I feel like there is a lot more free time for impulse spending vs. at the parks where once I budget for food and souvenirs there's not a lot of extra stuff I end up spending anything on.
But I was wondering in general how people budget for their onboard spending, and how well you do to sticking to that when you get on board.
Last time I cruised I cruised with my parents and there was no budget, lol, so I didn't really pay attention to anything. They paid for onboard expenses while we paid for the rest of our cruise/transport/trip and were insistent I not think about it, so I didn't! it was only a 4 day cruise and we didn't do any specialty dining, I had the rainforest in advance, Meme bought all of the souveniers and we had a drink or two with dinner every night.
I would like to be able to have a drink when I want it (but traveling as a single mom, I am not planning to walk around the cruise in a drunken stupor either), I would like to do Remy brunch and palo either brunch or dinner and a couple of tastings, I plan to do the rainforest room but I will be buying individual days ahead of time so that will be paid for. I will do port excursions but may not necessarily do them through Disney. I will more than likely say "yes" to popcorn refills and smoothies and premium ice cream treats - I am thinking of making a "coupon book" for this stuff for the kiddo because it will help him with the concept of budgeting as well... one premium sundae for the trip and a bucket of popcorn and a smoothie a day if he wants it. And then of course souvenirs... when we go to WDW I usually give him a budget of $100 that he has to earn before the trip that he can spend on anything (it really quiets down the constant "I wants" when I tell him he can have it if he spends HIS money on it) and then I will buy him one or two nice things for the trip out of my budget (last time we were there at festival of the arts and he got a wall hanging of his name written out graphically like star wars characters... we look for something special like that for his "big" souvenir).
Do people find that they budget and then end up spending wildly above it because it's a cruise and it's vacation? I hate to feel constrained on vacation (I budget pretty tightly the rest of the year) but I also do not have endless funds for a ridiculous onboard bill. How do people balance the two? I have gotten pretty good at budgeting for my WDW vacations so I don't feel deprived but don't have any nasty surprises at the end of the trip either. Cruising is a bit different as I feel like there is a lot more free time for impulse spending vs. at the parks where once I budget for food and souvenirs there's not a lot of extra stuff I end up spending anything on.