Wi-Fi- ??

This only works when the ship is in port and your phone connects to land-based cell towers. Mexico was included in my unlimited plan, but Bahamas had a similar daily charge.

Out at sea, your phone will connect to ship cellular service provided by "Cellular at Sea". At sea, my service charges $4/minute voice, 10 cents per SMS text, and $1/Megabyte download. If you download a Gigabyte, that's $1000 charge!

It's best to keep your phone in airplane mode while on the ship!


-Paul
We returned yesterday from a 4 day and had phones on airplane mode as we left PC. Wednesday afternoon we had a day at sea and while in the cabin DW's phone rings ????? Being both concerned and confused she answered since it was a family member who only wanted to talk about our cruise line of choice. OOPS, somehow the phone got off airplane mode soooooo :confused3
 
I just remembered that my oldest daughter is on our plan with Verizon and is going to Japan soon. I think we purchased a daily plan for each line while we were in the Caymans, I think it was like $10 per line, per day. Will such work well for her while in Japan?🤔
It is $12 per day now with AT&T. My boys have used the international day pass for years while traveling in Europe.
 
I never encountered the cellular at sea service.

If "Roaming" is disabled on your phone, it probably won't automatically connect to "Cellular at Sea" service.

Most people have "Roaming" enabled because most cell plan now allow free roaming within the US. The exception is in foreign countries and a sea where additional charged will apply.


-Paul
 
We buy eSims when we travel and it is much cheaper than paying per day. Here are my last few examples - you choose data amount and length of time. Most are a couple weeks and region not just one country.

The downside is they don’t use your phone # as you switch the eSIM. WiFi calling works if you turn that on and we still get iMessages as long as they are sent to our emails associated with our AppleIDs and not phone #, which works for us.
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These are for on land though. My husband is trying one meant to use cellular at sea this April for the first time that is more expensive - I think $57 or so for 3GB. We’ll see how well it works!
 

WiFi calling works if you turn that on and we still get iMessages as long as they are sent to our emails associated with our AppleIDs and not phone #, which works for us.
Just wanted to post this as a PSA regarding text messages. iMessages only work if you have an iPhone and are only trying to communicate with other iPhone users (which is the case for many people). If you or someone in your travel party uses Android, WhatsApp will allow you to communicate with people on land and on the ship without needing to worry about wifi, minutes, data, and similar concerns.
 
It might be cheaper through their cell phone carrier. AT&T is 20 per day for land and sea. 12 dollars a day for just land. https://www.att.com/international/day-pass/
I have not tried it yet on a ship, but I will in Europe this Summer. It worked great in Japan. We had 5G and no issues.
When I checked into adding this with AT&T, the included internet was very small. International day pass allows you to use your existing phone plan and included data on land. It wasn’t the same rules for the sea part. Maybe this will change!
 
I just remembered that my oldest daughter is on our plan with Verizon and is going to Japan soon. I think we purchased a daily plan for each line while we were in the Caymans, I think it was like $10 per line, per day. Will such work well for her while in Japan?🤔
A Verizon phone should work in Japan, but the Verizon day pass might not be the best option. You can get cheap eSIM cards from many providers in Japan, but those only work if the phone is unlocked or supports dual SIMs. If she's traveling with other people, it might be better to share the cost of a pocket Wi-Fi device instead. Both of those options only provide data, though. Wi-Fi calling and RCS messages would work, but plain SMS wouldn't.

If she's staying in the big cities, then anything that connects to DoCoMo, Softbank, or AU should be fine. If she's traveling to smaller cities and towns, then she'll want something that connects to DoCoMo or Softbank. If she's going to be away from populated areas a lot, then DoCoMo. I've seen people lately saying that the other, cheaper networks are much better now, but my recent experiences say otherwise. You might want to see who Verizon partners with before going with their daily passes.

And I guess a lot depends on how long she'll be there, too. If it's just a few days, then day passes are probably best. On longer trips, eSIM cards or Wi-Fi routers become more cost effective.

On my last trip, I used a pocket Wi-Fi device from Japan Wireless that connected to the Softbank network. I always had a good, fast 4G connection. It was a bit less than $100 for four weeks and that included airport pickup and shipping back to the provider at the end of the trip. The battery lasted all day without any problems, but they also provided a power bank to recharge if needed.
 
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When I checked into adding this with AT&T, the included internet was very small. International day pass allows you to use your existing phone plan and included data on land. It wasn’t the same rules for the sea part. Maybe this will change!
Interesting. It's pain when doing a European cruise and having to put your phone in airplane mode every time you set sail. I never had to worry about it with T-mobile, but I've had a lot of issues with AT&T. 3G was also free with T-mobile..maybe time to switch back.
 
I just got off Utopia of the seas and paid 172 for two devices on a 4 day cruise. Royal's wifi is great. I was able to stream anything I wanted. No I don't go on cruises to watch you tube or Netflix, but it helps pass the time on the elipitical, treadmill and jogging path. It was a huge improvement over what DCL offers.
 
I just got off Utopia of the seas and paid 172 for two devices on a 4 day cruise. Royal's wifi is great. I was able to stream anything I wanted. No I don't go on cruises to watch you tube or Netflix, but it helps pass the time on the elipitical, treadmill and jogging path. It was a huge improvement over what DCL offers.
Have you tried DCL's Wi-Fi since they installed Starlink terminals? It's much, much, much better than their old service. Even with the lower tier plan, I was able to stream videos without any trouble at all. I did have to use a VPN to bypass DCL's artificial "no streaming" limits, though.
 
Have you tried DCL's Wi-Fi since they installed Starlink terminals? It's much, much, much better than their old service. Even with the lower tier plan, I was able to stream videos without any trouble at all. I did have to use a VPN to bypass DCL's artificial "no streaming" limits, though.
Yes I’ve tried it many times. It doesn’t sound like you were able to stream without any trouble at all.
 

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