I actually feel that walking into the cabin during the day, with the bed made and neat - and more importantly, after dinner, with the lights set to low with the Personal Navigator available and a towel animal to greet me - is actually one of the significant things that makes cruising the experience it is. (That is so integral to my
DCL experience that I can imagine it.)
The cabin is the sanctuary from the hubbub of the crowds. Having it neatened for you just amplifies that.
I hadn’t really thought about this before.
I did wave off many days of service on a solo NCL cruise because the cabin was too small for me to keep my stuff stored. And that cabin never had the same welcoming feeling I get in serviced rooms. It felt more like a too-small dorm room.
We all are paying luxury prices for a
Disney cruise. Having that effort by the room stewards is part of it. And yes, in the Social Contract of cruising, tipping is a part of the agreement on most cruise ships.
The OP has the right to chose no tipping. But I also feel there’s a responsibility to notify the Hotel Manager, if only by way of Guest Services, of that early on so as not penalize the steward. As much as I dislike playing Human Resource Manager in doing job evaluations (The Survey) while on vacation, anyone who reduces the expected Service Charge (ie, gratuities) needs to make it clear to a Supervisor that it is from the guest’s views of this practice.
I would certainly prefer gratuities to be included. But I work within the system until it’s changed.
This is the way

- The Mandalorian