For us booking an RCCL cruise brought so many unknowns when you are so familiar with
DCL.
I am not familiar with the terms used on RCCL and have been reading blogs and RCCL site on DIS for over a week to educate myself. The RCCL web site was difficult to find available cabins and they were aware of that when I called.
I don't find it particularly difficult but then again I spend way too much time sifting through various travel websites looking for deals and stuff, so I've negotiated a lot worse user interfaces. You should check out Princess.com to see a real exercise in futility.
Typically I'll look through the cruise site with cruisedeckplans open in another window so I can get an idea of where everything is spatially, plus look at some room photos if there are any. Once I've got my
mise en place, I call a
travel agent to do the booking. Because as much as I love DIY travel, cruise companies can be a massive headache if there are issues, and if someone is willing to shoulder that burden in my place, they're more than welcome to do it.
Case in point - the October cruise I booked with Royal was originally a 7 night sailing out of Ravenna to Barcelona. Well, for reasons Royal changed their October itinerary and cancelled our cruise with a few options, but the upshot is that we wanted to rebook to a 6 night sailing out of Athens to Barcelona. Basically same dates with some of the same ports. Calling Royal to rebook would be a (pardon the pun) royal pain, but I had booked through Costco Travel, they talked with Royal and got me switched over in 30 min, which is not bad.
No info on excursions from Europe ports and pricing until after you book and not many blogs covered excursions or reviews. It would be nice to know in advance.
I would say that on Royal, Carnival and NCL people are more inclined to go their own way, so would agree that finding blogs or videos of ship excursions can be difficult. With that said, their excursions won't be significantly different from what DCL offers, so if you can see what is there, you'll get an idea of what's on offer. You may also want to check viator and getyourguide as they will also have similar excursions.
For Europe specifically, I'll watch vlogs of ports irrespective of whether they are cruise specific or not. I find people that do a "24h in..." type vlogs (proper vlogs, not tiktok-style posts) give you an idea of what is and is not possible to do at each port.
Questions I have are whether to use their
travel insurance, why pricing on a larger balcony is so high,
transportation from airport to cruise ship availability?
- I would shop around for travel insurance.
- The larger balcony cost, it depends on the ship and the balcony location. I think the older ships have less large balconies, so that might drive up the price.
- Transportation to cruise ship likely depends on the port. But in a lot of the cities, it's pretty convenient to take the Metro or get a taxi/timeshare. You just have to be vigilant against pickpockets.