We were booked on the Fantasy for 2/12/22 with a future cruise credit from a canceled Alaska June 2021 cruise. The goal of the cruise was to spend time with my brother's family and we had a group of 10 total in 3 cabins. They decided since they don't cruise often, there was risk of being denied boarding at the port, risk of quarantine and moved cabins on the ship, higher probability of canceled or modified ports, and this wasn't a discounted cruise (they booked early before cruising restarted and had expected things would be a little better by now) we should postpone. I was willing to roll the dice and go if they were still in favor (they've had a countdown going with their kids for over a year) but didn't feel great about the stress of boarding and potentially having devastated kids if we were denied, or being stuck for several days quarantining in the cabin. It's all for the best as I don't think we are ideal candidates for cruising right now. I could see going if I was local to Florida, got a good deal, and could drive home if denied boarding at the port. The one thing I will be sad to miss out on are the lower number of passengers on board.
For all those reasons we all moved our cruise to January 2023. It took several hours on the phone because ours was booked with a FCC which could not be forwarded past September. I don't think I really understand what they did or how the penalties now work. We were between 30-45 days out (I think the change was done on 1/8?). I was told our penalty would stay at 75% on the new cruise. In hindsight I suppose it would have been better to cancel outright under 14 days as I have COVID exposure every single day at work. But I felt uncomfortable counting on that to not change and at this point it's too late to change my mind. Are we then locked into the new date? Or are the funds just promised to DCL but we can still change dates again if we want? For a concierge cabin, what is the latest you can normally change dates? What happens if my husband isn't able to cruise but the rest of us are (he's a little uncertain about work)? Can we swap another passenger in for him, for example my mother, or are those payments specific to him and 75% would be forfeited and we'd have to pay again for my mother to cruise? We did purchase the DCL insurance. Could my husband use the insurance for his portion of the cruise but the rest of us keep the stateroom, or is it all or nothing and the whole cabin must cancel to use the "cancel for any reason" insurance?
What can I expect for the timeline on accounting and refunds? I was told they can't just forward all the current funds to the new cruise because of the FCC. They said they had to cancel the FCC and issue a refund for the Alaska cruise. But then could use some of those refunded funds towards the deposit for the new cruise and I would get an email with details. Some of the cruise was paid with gift cards (which I don't have). I was told I would get an email detailing the accounting, a refund to my credit card, and an email with a gift card for a refund of the gift card portion. It's been 10 days, I realize they are probably very busy, and so far I have not gotten any refund or emails. About how long should I wait before checking back on the status? Also, the amount they applied as a deposit for the new cruise doesn't make sense to me. It's more than 20%, more than 20% plus the insurance, less than 75% of the moved cruise. We did have to pay a little more on top of our FCC when we moved from the Alaska 2021 to the Fantasy 2022. Because of the FCC we upgraded to concierge on the Fantasy from a veranda cabin on the Alaska sailing. The current credit toward the Jan 2023 sailing showing on DCL's site is roughly 20% of the new fare plus the additional funds we put toward the 2022 cruise beyond the FCC so maybe that's how they calculated it? I was surprised they didn't keep 75% as that is the penalty amount. Any help in understanding would be much appreciated. Thanks!
For all those reasons we all moved our cruise to January 2023. It took several hours on the phone because ours was booked with a FCC which could not be forwarded past September. I don't think I really understand what they did or how the penalties now work. We were between 30-45 days out (I think the change was done on 1/8?). I was told our penalty would stay at 75% on the new cruise. In hindsight I suppose it would have been better to cancel outright under 14 days as I have COVID exposure every single day at work. But I felt uncomfortable counting on that to not change and at this point it's too late to change my mind. Are we then locked into the new date? Or are the funds just promised to DCL but we can still change dates again if we want? For a concierge cabin, what is the latest you can normally change dates? What happens if my husband isn't able to cruise but the rest of us are (he's a little uncertain about work)? Can we swap another passenger in for him, for example my mother, or are those payments specific to him and 75% would be forfeited and we'd have to pay again for my mother to cruise? We did purchase the DCL insurance. Could my husband use the insurance for his portion of the cruise but the rest of us keep the stateroom, or is it all or nothing and the whole cabin must cancel to use the "cancel for any reason" insurance?
What can I expect for the timeline on accounting and refunds? I was told they can't just forward all the current funds to the new cruise because of the FCC. They said they had to cancel the FCC and issue a refund for the Alaska cruise. But then could use some of those refunded funds towards the deposit for the new cruise and I would get an email with details. Some of the cruise was paid with gift cards (which I don't have). I was told I would get an email detailing the accounting, a refund to my credit card, and an email with a gift card for a refund of the gift card portion. It's been 10 days, I realize they are probably very busy, and so far I have not gotten any refund or emails. About how long should I wait before checking back on the status? Also, the amount they applied as a deposit for the new cruise doesn't make sense to me. It's more than 20%, more than 20% plus the insurance, less than 75% of the moved cruise. We did have to pay a little more on top of our FCC when we moved from the Alaska 2021 to the Fantasy 2022. Because of the FCC we upgraded to concierge on the Fantasy from a veranda cabin on the Alaska sailing. The current credit toward the Jan 2023 sailing showing on DCL's site is roughly 20% of the new fare plus the additional funds we put toward the 2022 cruise beyond the FCC so maybe that's how they calculated it? I was surprised they didn't keep 75% as that is the penalty amount. Any help in understanding would be much appreciated. Thanks!