Which Cruise is recommended for a first-time Disney Cruise?

Plireed

Earning My Ears
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Dec 5, 2024
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Hello all. I have a 2 year old grand-daughter. What age do you recommend for children for their first Disney Cruise? Which one is best for a first cruise (location and affordability)? Thank you so much!
 
Of course it depends on the people going, but if wait until your granddaughter is 3 (and toilet trained), she can go to the Oceaneers Club as much or as little as she and her family would like. Younger kids can go the Nursery, but that needs to be booked and has an additional cost.

We started both of my kids with a 3-night Bahamas cruise to make sure they could handle being on the water (they could). Longer cruises have a lower per-day cost, and allow kids and adults to explore more of the ship. It's usually easier to book adult dining on longer cruises, since there are more opportunities.

Every Disney ship is fine for kids, but the Wish does seem more designed for young kids than the others (though I haven't cruised on the Wish yet). The Dream and Fantasy have more activities for older kids (Midship Detective Agency, miniature golf) than the Wonder and Magic, but those probably won't appeal much to a 3 year old. I'd look at everyone's schedules, your budget, and whether any ports have specific appeal to the adults and choose an itinerary based on that.
 
Thank you! This is wonderful information! The 3 day sounds perfect!
 
I'll add my two cents here and say that I would slightly disagree and recommend a four-night trip as your first. I think three nights is just too short and that the temptation could be to try to cram "doing everything" into a three night voyage, which would make the whole trip feel VERY rushed, hectic, etc. Consider that even with an early boarding group you won't be on the ship before 11:30 or 12, plus the mandatory safety drill, and really you're only getting half a day max on the ship the first night. Four nights gives you a little extra time without committing you to a full week if someone has motion sickness, has anxiety about being in open water, etc. That being said, my first two DCL sailings were 7 Night cruises, one with three kids and the other with four. Both were amazing! We've been hooked ever since.

As far as which port to use, if every other consideration is equal (flights, pre-night hotels, transfers, etc) I recommend Port Canaveral or San Diego. While San Diego is completely void of the "Disney touches" that are everywhere in PC, I can't say enough for how much we enjoyed our embarkation experience there. We stayed at a reasonably priced hotel across the street from the port, woke up with a view of the Wonder, literally WALKED across the street to the terminal when it was our time to board, breezed through security and were sitting having lunch in Cabanas less than a full hour after we left the hotel room. After the cruise, the airport is a 10 minute uber ride from the cruise terminal. Since you're traveling with small kids, this easy "in and out" experience is, in my opinion, hugely underrated.

While getting to and from PC from the Orlando International Airport is a bit more labor intensive (and expensive), the cast members at PC and the overall terminal experience are beyond excellent, particularly if you're traveling during any of the "Special Sailing" periods like Halloween on the High Seas or Very Merrytime sailings. It's still my favorite port, but San Diego was great, too. Vancouver was mostly ok, but I feel like we did a LOT of walking between checking in at the terminal and actually boarding the ship. We had a stroller and various other items that made the walk feel longer than it probably was, but it wasn't my favorite boarding experience overall. I REALLY didn't like New Orleans. We haven't used Galveston yet (which is wild since we live in Texas) but I think most people have decent experiences there.

That's probably way more info than you were looking for, but I hope it helps! :drinking: No matter which port you use and how many nights you sail for, I'm sure you're going to have the best time.
 

For a 3 year old Granddaughter, I would go with the 3 night Wish. Princess heavy and it is short to see how well she does. She might not like being out to sea and 3 days is easier than 4.
 
For a 3 year old Granddaughter, I would go with the 3 night Wish. Princess heavy and it is short to see how well she does. She might not like being out to sea and 3 days is easier than 4.
Concur. Also, are the adult relatives cruising experienced? That (may?) drive a longer cruise, not the littles desires who will probably not remember it at all.
 

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