SunnyDhappy
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2017
- Messages
- 41
Looking at summer 7 nights cruises the prices are 2,000-5,000 more than 2 years ago.
We booked another cruise line for our annual summer trip because of the dramatic cost difference.
I wonder how many other DCL faithful fans are jumping ship due to DCL continued price increases.
If posts here are to believed in their entirety - there are a number of people who've "jumped ship" so to speak.Looking at summer 7 nights cruises the prices are 2,000-5,000 more than 2 years ago.
We booked another cruise line for our annual summer trip because of the dramatic cost difference.
I wonder how many other DCL faithful fans are jumping ship due to DCL continued price increases.
We started cruising other lines mostly out of boredom. We found we liked them as much as DCL. and we saved money. Well continue to sail DCL when it's a cruise I feel is a good value. I'm going to book the British Isles cruise next sept. I can't say we've jumped ship, but you won't find me sailing on the Fantasy during the Summer season.If posts here are to believed in their entirety - there are a number of people who've "jumped ship" so to speak.
But, I think, even among the people who feel the prices have risen too much, some of them will still continue to cruise DCL. Others will try other lines and find they are good experiences, also. And some will go to other lines, but still do DCL on occasion.
you won't find me sailing on the Fantasy during the Summer season.
If you compare apples to apples, in some cases their prices are in line. (Not all. Some)Looking at the Oasis of the Seas, vs the Disney Fantasy, granted the Oasis is almost twice the size of the Fantasy, the pricing is fairly close.
Using Sept 2018 as an example, For a 7 night Eastern on the Oasis, with a balcony, deck 8 midship, is 5700 and change. For the Fantasy, leaving the same port, also doing an Eastern, deck 8 also with a comparable room, is 5600 and change. The only real difference, besides ports, is the date. (Oasis goes to Nassau on her eastern) And the Fantasy would leave a week later for her eastern. The Oasis apparently does easterns opposite of the Fantasy.
Realistically, DCL is on par with at least the Oasis class ships.
Part of the issue I can see is that for the first 10 years or so, DCL never changed their pricing. When DCL first launched the Magic class, the selling point was cabins were bigger then industry average, characters etc. And the price never really changed between 1998 and about 2010. Then someone came up with the brite idea (insert sarcasm here) of reverting to industry average. And I think that's what we are seeing. The Dream class cabins are industry average. RCCL has multiple ships with DreamWorks characters. The Dream class introduced the Aquaduck. Just about every ship now has some type of slide or adventure ride, and virtual porthole.
So on the surface it seems that DCL is expensive, but when you compare to other lines, there just keeping up with the Jonses.
Granted, there are itins that are better then DCLs, and less expensive. DCL I think will fall in line with what everyone else is doing. Itll take some time. Don't be surprised if you see them in the next year or so start charging for room service.
If you compare apples to apples, in some cases their prices are in line. (Not all. Some)Looking at the Oasis of the Seas, vs the Disney Fantasy, granted the Oasis is almost twice the size of the Fantasy, the pricing is fairly close.
Using Sept 2018 as an example, For a 7 night Eastern on the Oasis, with a balcony, deck 8 midship, is 5700 and change. For the Fantasy, leaving the same port, also doing an Eastern, deck 8 also with a comparable room, is 5600 and change. The only real difference, besides ports, is the date. (Oasis goes to Nassau on her eastern) And the Fantasy would leave a week later for her eastern. The Oasis apparently does easterns opposite of the Fantasy.
Realistically, DCL is on par with at least the Oasis class ships.
Part of the issue I can see is that for the first 10 years or so, DCL never changed their pricing. When DCL first launched the Magic class, the selling point was cabins were bigger then industry average, characters etc. And the price never really changed between 1998 and about 2010. Then someone came up with the brite idea (insert sarcasm here) of reverting to industry average. And I think that's what we are seeing. The Dream class cabins are industry average. RCCL has multiple ships with DreamWorks characters. The Dream class introduced the Aquaduck. Just about every ship now has some type of slide or adventure ride, and virtual porthole.
So on the surface it seems that DCL is expensive, but when you compare to other lines, there just keeping up with the Jonses.
Granted, there are itins that are better then DCLs, and less expensive. DCL I think will fall in line with what everyone else is doing. Itll take some time. Don't be surprised if you see them in the next year or so start charging for room service.
I am wondering where you got the pricing for September 2018 for Royal Caribbean? I just checked your dates;
Royal Caribbean Oasis of the Seas; Category 2C 2960 CAD
Disney Cruise Line Fanasty; Category 4C 5200 CAD
* prices for 2.
I booked the Symphony of the Seas from Barcelona in May 2018; Disney is about 3000 CAD more than what I am paying. The Magic compared to RCL's newest ship with one more port.
Yes, after 8 Disney cruises we "jumped ship" in 2008. Since then we have tried Princess, HAL, Carnival and back to NCL and gone to Alaska, Bermuda and British Isles -- all at prices more than half of what Disney wanted and we had a great time on each and every one. This September we are going back to New England/Canada on Carnival because the Magic prices out of NYC were insane! I am platinum and look forward to using my benefits, but I don't see doing too many more Disney cruises since even when they added the two ships the prices did not level off.
If you compare apples to apples, in some cases their prices are in line. (Not all. Some)Looking at the Oasis of the Seas, vs the Disney Fantasy, granted the Oasis is almost twice the size of the Fantasy, the pricing is fairly close.
Using Sept 2018 as an example, For a 7 night Eastern on the Oasis, with a balcony, deck 8 midship, is 5700 and change. For the Fantasy, leaving the same port, also doing an Eastern, deck 8 also with a comparable room, is 5600 and change. The only real difference, besides ports, is the date. (Oasis goes to Nassau on her eastern) And the Fantasy would leave a week later for her eastern. The Oasis apparently does easterns opposite of the Fantasy.
Realistically, DCL is on par with at least the Oasis class ships.
Part of the issue I can see is that for the first 10 years or so, DCL never changed their pricing. When DCL first launched the Magic class, the selling point was cabins were bigger then industry average, characters etc. And the price never really changed between 1998 and about 2010. Then someone came up with the brite idea (insert sarcasm here) of reverting to industry average. And I think that's what we are seeing. The Dream class cabins are industry average. RCCL has multiple ships with DreamWorks characters. The Dream class introduced the Aquaduck. Just about every ship now has some type of slide or adventure ride, and virtual porthole.
So on the surface it seems that DCL is expensive, but when you compare to other lines, there just keeping up with the Jonses.
Granted, there are itins that are better then DCLs, and less expensive. DCL I think will fall in line with what everyone else is doing. Itll take some time. Don't be surprised if you see them in the next year or so start charging for room service.
Similar as you, we are platinum on Disney. We decided to try NCL the week of Christmas and it was like almost $5,000 less Disney for that week. We had a terrific time on NCL. We definitely missed some Disney magic but not $5,000 worth of it. We are trying Princess at spring break and MSC for summer. All half of what DCL charged for similar week/stateroom class.
But, as you said, Oasis of the seas has twice the size (a capacity of about 2500 more passengers)...
... about four times the specialty dining options (most likely the same for bars), and much more activities and entertainment options.
I would not compare the Fantasy to the Oasis Class ships... Freedom Class, maybe?
What would be the price comparison with the best ship from RCCL's Freedom Class?