How do I book a cruise with 5

Jennyvelaz

Can a Princess have twins, too?
Joined
Oct 11, 2004
Messages
648
Are there any family of 5's out there? I need help planning a possibilty. With the kids for free thing, 2 paying adults need to be in the same room. As biased as this is towards families of 5 or any number greater (don't get me started), can my 2 year old stay in a PnP in the same room?:flower3:
 
We have 5 and we have decided we will NOT be cruising any time soon! It is DOUBLE the cost, meaning that 2 year old (or 4 in my case) will cost you the same the total of the other 4 of you!

:hippie:


Dawn
 
That's OK I just can't figure out why she's not free or where'll she sleep!:confused3
 
Our travel agent told us that we either had to book a Cat 4 or higher or get 2 adjoining rooms for our family of 5 (kids are 14, 10 and 1).

Just not worth it for us unless we go with other friends/family to stay in that 2nd room.
 

Is it because the room capacity is 4 (some of that has to do with capacity limits on the ship)? It's not like WDW where a baby under 3yo can stay in your room and not "count". Everyone on a cruise counts; even the youngest infants are charged to cruise.
 
That's OK I just can't figure out why she's not free or where'll she sleep!:confused3

I'm sure it's a limit of 2 free children. Ask on the cruise boards and I'm sure there is someone with solid info on this promo plus someone will know where she'd sleep.
 
You can only put five people in a Cat 4, 3, 2, 1. The only other option you have is two rooms. It does not matter the age of the 5th person. The 5th person will not be free( one adult=one kid free ). If you book two rooms, rooms are based on double occupancy and one adult has to be in each room. Therefore, you are basically paying adult price for the first kid in each room.

The lowest Cat for connecting rooms are cat 10. It usually is a better deal to book two cat 10s than 1 cat 4 room. With the promo you may want to price things out.
 
With the kids for free thing, 2 paying adults need to be in the same room. :

Actually it states that children are free after the first 2 guests pay full price, not necessarily adults. So lets say if I wanted to sail w/o dh and just take our 2 boys, 1 child would cost the same as myself and the other would go free.
Also with this special, you still pay port fees/govt. fees for the "free" kid.

If this is your first cruise, which I'm guessing it is, you really don't want more than 4 in a stateroom anyway. :crowded: They are very small; about 1/3 of a small hotel room. The bathroom is about the size of a non-walk-in closet. DCL is not anti-family; quite the opposite. Most cruise lines don't hold more than 4 either unless you get into suites. We are a family of 4 and are just about bursting at the seams in a Cat. 9 (slightly larger than the cheaper Cat. 11 & 12 size) I can't imagine adding another child, his/her stuff, and a pack n play to that tiny room. jmho.

Depending on the cruise, it may not really be double the cost. Sometimes it's only a few hundred more. You don't pay per stateroom like a hotel, it's per passenger. One price for the first 2 guests, then a cheaper price for the 3rd and 4the guest all sharing 1 stateroom. The only difference when you need 2 staterooms is that 2 of the children will be paying "adult" prices. Cruise prices don't usually just go by age like WDW tickets do. The 3rd and 4th guests are much cheaper whether they are adults or children.
Since you must have 1 adult officially assigned to each stateroom (they don't really care where you actually sleep) you and child #1 will be paying "First 2 guests" rate. In the other stateroom, your dh and child#2 will pay "First 2 guests" rate. Child #3 will pay "additional guest in a stateroom" rate, which will be much lower than the rest. There are very small surcharges with DCL if the 3rd/4th guests are 13 or older.

I hope I'm not babbling too much. It's waaaay past my bedtime. ;)

As our boys get older/bigger I know soon we will need 2 connecting staterooms anyway. It would be extremely cramped with 2 adults and 2 teens all sharing 1 room.:headache: (1 bathroom, 1 tv)

You will get MUCH more info if you check out the DCL thread here on the dis. It's a very helpful, happy crowd there. :goodvibes

It's not cheap but sooooo worth it. I will say besides showing my kids the Grand Canyon, :worship: a DCL cruise is the ultimate first-class family vacation. pixiedust: It completely blows away any WDW trip. It just pales in comparison. We are still on cloud nine from our 2nd DCL cruise and can't wait until next Halloween to go again. :cloud9: I might have to sell a body part but still plan to sail in 2010 too! :laughing:


Also just to clarify to the pp who stated even infants pay to cruise..... children under 3 are only charged port fee/govt. fees which is really peanuts compared to the rest of the cruise costs. I believe that's a mandatory fee as that is the same as the "free kids" charge.

Oh, 1 more thing... when you book Cat. 12 they assign your stateroom a few weeks prior to the cruise. Your 2 staterooms are not guaranteed to be even remotely near each other. Cat. 11 allows you to choose your stateroom but even 2 together don't connect. If your children are young you'll want connecting rooms which will be Cat. 10 or higher.
 
We're 7, and get ajoining cabins. The last time we went, my parents came, too, so we were 9, and I found it was definitely cheaper to get ajoining cabins than a suite that would sleep 5. A lot of cabins only sleep 3!
 
On some of Carnival's older ships you can put 5 in a regular cabin. Its tight but doable.
 
Room capacity has to do with life boats. If you can cruise off season..they have had some great prices for cat 12s. The only thing with the 12's is they don't connect. If you want connecting cabins you have to book a cat 10 or higher.

Cruising is more expensive..but you also don't have to pay for food..that is all included. It's a great way to vacation though...very relaxing.
 
Actually, I read somewhere that up to 3 children can sail free with two paying adults...so all of your kids would be free. The only catch is that you'd most likely have to book a stateroom meant for 5 (even if your baby's in a PNP), which can run a LOT more per person than cheaper/lower category staterooms. Just to be sure, though, submit a quote through Dreams Unlimited or call your travel agent and ask. They'll be able to tell you what your best option is.

In my case, since I've got 4 kids, it's cheaper for me to bring the Grandparents along, since I'd have to pay full fare for two of us anyway...so it's like giving Nana & Papa a free vacation.
 
I know its not Disney but some of the newer ships on other cruiselines do have family cabins that will fit 5. (We are considering it for our cruise next year on Carnival Dream, we have 3 kids).

But honestly, since we are traveling with grandparents, it will probably be more cost effective for us to get 2 adjoining "cheaper" rooms.
 
Again, I know its not DCL (which we have yet to do but will soon I hope).
We have cruised on Carnival before with kids and had a wonderful experience. My oldest has been to WDW 4 times yet he only asks when we are going to do "Kids Club" again (another cruise). Sure he loves WDW when hes there but the fact that he loved the kids program that much on Carnival is awesome. They have scheduled programming for most of the day.
Kids have full "access" to the age appropriate activites of Camp Carnival starting at age 2 and they do not need to be potty trained, just provide them with diapers.

I just got price quotes today for the brand new Carnival ship, the Dream for 12/09 cruise.
We would be cruising with my parents. So 4 adults, 3 kids (ages at that time would be 8, 4, 2).
The new ship has family suites with bigger rooms and 1.5 baths (i believe basically an extra toilet and mini sink) that fit 5. For the 7 day cruise only, including tax (but not insurance) it would cost our family of 5 $3400.
We will probably choose to have our parents then in their own non adjoining room but close by which would cost them $1430 (again with tax, no insurance).

I know its not Disney and Im sure the DCL is an amazing experience. We just love to cruise and love Disney and so far have seperated the two. Maybe in 2010 we will try DCL. :)
 
Again, I know its not DCL (which we have yet to do but will soon I hope).
We have cruised on Carnival before with kids and had a wonderful experience. My oldest has been to WDW 4 times yet he only asks when we are going to do "Kids Club" again (another cruise). Sure he loves WDW when hes there but the fact that he loved the kids program that much on Carnival is awesome. They have scheduled programming for most of the day.
Kids have full "access" to the age appropriate activites of Camp Carnival starting at age 2 and they do not need to be potty trained, just provide them with diapers.

I just got price quotes today for the brand new Carnival ship, the Dream for 12/09 cruise.
We would be cruising with my parents. So 4 adults, 3 kids (ages at that time would be 8, 4, 2).
The new ship has family suites with bigger rooms and 1.5 baths (i believe basically an extra toilet and mini sink) that fit 5. For the 7 day cruise only, including tax (but not insurance) it would cost our family of 5 $3400.
We will probably choose to have our parents then in their own non adjoining room but close by which would cost them $1430 (again with tax, no insurance).

I know its not Disney and Im sure the DCL is an amazing experience. We just love to cruise and love Disney and so far have seperated the two. Maybe in 2010 we will try DCL. :)

We did 3 Carnival cruises prior to trying DCL. While we did have fun at the pool, slides and arcade there wasn't a whole lot for families to do together.
Shows on DCL are just amazing. You really can't compare the 2. If you just look at price only Carnival of course is cheaper but nothing comes close to a Disney cruise. I like that I don't have to walk thru a smoky casino to get to another part of the ship. I like that I don't have to question if the entertainment is appropriate for families, (at least before 10 pm anyway.)
I like the big sail away party, the ship's horn, the huge Goofy that hangs over the back of the ship. I especially like how it's not decorated like a wh--- house. I like seeing characters dance thru dinner and watching fireworks at the pirate party.
I could go on and on. It's all the warm fuzzy feelings you get at MK but you're at sea. :wizard: :cloud9:
Also, jmho, but Carnival's low, low prices sometimes attract a trashy crowd. I'd rather pay an extra $1000 to get away from the guy in line in front of us at the port who kept a 3 ft. long string of dental floss over his shoulder. He'd floss a little then fling it back over his shoulder. The line would move up a little then he'd floss again, fling it back again. That's when I decided my next cruise would be on DCL.
 
Also, jmho, but Carnival's low, low prices sometimes attract a trashy crowd. I'd rather pay an extra $1000 to get away from the guy in line in front of us at the port who kept a 3 ft. long string of dental floss over his shoulder. He'd floss a little then fling it back over his shoulder. The line would move up a little then he'd floss again, fling it back again. That's when I decided my next cruise would be on DCL.

I do think that the 3-4 day cruises on Carnival do attract more of a party crowd. I didnt find that to be the case on our 7 day cruise.
I do realize that DCL is a great time but just giving people another option if they want to try a cruise with their kids.
We took our kids (then 5 and 15m) with us every night to formal sit down dinner. The wait staff loved the boys and entertained them every night.
My oldest enjoyed the early evening dance show.

Yes in general Disney is more kid friendly but as many people on this board will agree, just because its Disney doesnt mean its totally clean G rated guests going there. You can run into "that guy" on a DCL cruise or a Carnival cruise. Ive run into plenty of drunk or just plain rude people at Disney myself.

So yeah, Im not totally comparing the 2 as I know they cater to different people. Its just that most of the cruise ships in the last few years have in fact become very kid and family friendly too.
I know we will love DCL when we go. But Im going to love Carnival again too. We just love doing things with our kids no matter what it is.
 


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