DisneYE
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2013
- Messages
- 1,680
400 paying passengers are better than no paying passengers. Cruising is one of those businesses where the fixed costs are the biggest concern. Given their buying power, what does feeding a passenger cost? Maybe $100 for a 7 day cruise? Maybe $150? But the crew costs and costs of operating the ship stay the same if there are 400 or 4,000 paying guests.
I've always Wondered abt break-even point of a cruise. I'm an economist & I'm always thinking about costs, return etc.
Would love to hear someone here in the know provide some data
e:g the average pp cost on a 7-night is ~ $1,500 -> so 400 ppl is ~ $600k
The avg cruiser I figured spends $250 on drinks, spa, gifts etc on a 7-night .. that's another $100k
$150 pp is a good number for food. but if you count $100 per CM (assuming 1000 CM's) that's ~$350k for food only
So $700k - $350k in food= $350k... then take costs of fuel, salaries, port fees, etc.
At 400 ppl per 7-night, the ship is losing money. - I think the break-even point is around 800 passengers.
A full ship renders $5-6 million per 7-night sailing. At <500 passengers, I think the cruise is bleeding $ bad.
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