Tonka's Skipper
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2010
- Messages
- 7,266
Actually, it is "always to capacity". But the same is true for every other ship out there as well. Cruise lines do not allow ships to leave port with empty cabins even if they have to practically give them away. Capacity isn't the issue. It is: "What do they have to charge to fill the ship". I got a last minute offer to sail on DCL for a week-long cruise for $389 per person for a cruise leaving in 10 days. They weren't going to let that bed stay empty.
See page 6, bullet point 10 of this...http://www.f-cca.com/downloads/2013-cruise-industry-overview.pdf
Jimmy you have a point but the lines cannot always fill every ship, even DCL. They may try, but rarely happens.
Not to mention is how you define *capacity*...all cabin occupied?....full fares?.....discounted fare?, empty berths?
Of course I was referring to cabin sold in the range where they are making money. Giving a cabin away at $389 per person may help pay the staff and operation, and basically some income is better then none, but they are not making a profit.
Before you ask, no I cannot prove it, its just known in the industry.
I also know Disney has better bookings then the other lines because they are Disney, and no those figures are not released, but its known in the industry.
AKK[/QUOTE]