July 20
Departure
7
nights
6
ports
Not included
WiFi prices have quietly increased multiple times. Even the basic Social plan is $20+/day. Streaming (Netflix, Zoom) requires the Premium plan.
A 20% service charge (increased from 18% in late 2025) is added on top of the drink package price. The Bottomless Bubbles soda package also increased to $11.99/day plus 20% service charge.
Gratuity rates increase regularly. The April 2026 increase is the latest. A 20% service charge is also added automatically to all bar, dining, and spa purchases.
The 20% automatic service charge applies to all room service orders beyond the free continental breakfast.
A 20% gratuity is automatically added to all specialty dining charges.
Daily gratuities of $17/person/day (standard) or $19/person/day (suites) are auto-charged starting April 2026. Pre-purchasing before April 1, 2026 locks in the lower rate.
Carnival increased its automatic service charge on all purchases from 18% to 20% in late 2025. This applies to drinks, specialty dining, spa, and room service.
Advertised fares look very low but exclude taxes, port fees ($150-350+ per person depending on itinerary), and daily gratuities. Alaska itineraries have especially high port fees.
Canceling before final payment gives a non-refundable future cruise credit minus a $50/person service fee. After final payment, penalties escalate to 100% within 14-56 days of departure depending on cruise length.

Day 1
SeattleUnited StatesPremier gateway for Alaska cruises, steps from Pike Place Market and the Space Needle.
Day 2
At Sea
Day 3
At Sea

Day 4
SkagwayUnited StatesGold Rush National Historic Landmark town with a still-running White Pass mountain railroad.

Day 5
JuneauUnited StatesAlaska's road-less capital offers the Mendenhall Glacier and humpback whale-watching from port.
Day 6
KetchikanUnited StatesHome to the world's largest collection of standing totem poles and rich Alaska Native heritage.

Day 8
SeattleUnited StatesPremier gateway for Alaska cruises, steps from Pike Place Market and the Space Needle.
The 1898 prospector railway still runs — narrow-gauge, clifftop curves, 3,000-foot climb to White Pass. No gold, but the views survived.
🕒 May–Sep daily; scheduled departures from downtown depot
Free NPS visitor center in the middle of Skagway's preserved 1898 streetscape — ranger talks, Gold Rush film, and the park IS the town.
🕒 Daily May–Sep
Over 8,800 pieces of Gold Rush driftwood cover the facade — assembled by a fraternal order in 1900. The most photographed wall in Skagway.
🕒 Daily May–Sep
The most intact Gold Rush streetscape in North America — eight blocks of 1898 storefronts still doing business, not just posing for selfies.
Former upstairs brothel — now a saloon-museum where costumed madams run the tour. The beer is real; the history is even realer.
🕒 Daily May–Sep
Melodrama Gold Rush show at Eagles Hall since 1923 — Alaska's longest-running performance. Soapy Smith gets shot every night; it's fine.
🕒 May–Sep; multiple shows daily
Inside the 1899 McCabe College building — Soapy Smith's hat, watch, and con-man kit are here. Small museum, big character per square foot.
🕒 Daily May–Sep
Soapy Smith's grave faces the surveyor who shot him across a few feet of Alaska soil. The irony is not lost on either of them, presumably.
Working farm and sculpture garden on a former floodplain — produce feeds local restaurants, glassblowing studio provides the plot twist.
🕒 Daily May–Sep
Dyea hit 8,000 residents before the railway skipped it in 1898. Now: building outlines, one graveyard, and the Chilkoot Trail trailhead.
A glacial lake 19km from ship — salmon run in late summer, drawing brown bears and photographers who stand closer than advisable.
A valley glacier you can walk right up to — Nugget Falls thunders 377 ft nearby. Go early; afternoon crowds are real.
🕒 Visitor Center: May–Sep daily; limited winter hours
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Downtown_Juneau,_Alaska_from_the_Goldbelt_Tram.jpg)
Hauls you 1,800 feet above the channel in 6 minutes. Eagles drift at eye level. Overcast? The clouds are the view.
🕒 May–Sep: daily 9am–9pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (210103 Snowy capitol.jpg)
No dome, no entry fee — one of the only US state capitols you can walk right through. Built in 1931 as a federal building.
🕒 Jun–Aug: Mon–Sat; rest of year: Mon–Fri
Food & DrinkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Red_Dog_Saloon_Juneau.jpg)
Sawdust floors, walls plastered with gold-rush relics, and a bar that smells like history. Touristy? Yes. Worth it? Also yes.
🕒 Daily 11am–late (cruise season)
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Saint Nicholas Russian Orthodox Church, Downtown Juneau, Alaska 2.jpg)
The oldest Orthodox church in Southeast Alaska, built 1894. A white octagon and green dome — more Vladivostok than Juneau.
🕒 Summer: daily, variable hours
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Alaska State Museum.jpg)
Best Alaska Native art collection in the region — the eagle totem in the rotunda alone is worth the trip inside.
🕒 Tue–Sat 9am–5pm (May–Sep); reduced Oct–Apr
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Gold Creek valley, AK.JPG)
The 1912 compressor house that powered the world's largest hard-rock gold mine. Still smells faintly of that ambition.
🕒 May–Sep: daily 9:30am–6:30pm
Watch king salmon fight their way up a fish ladder past a viewing window, then buy the smoked version next door. Circle of life.
🕒 May–Sep: Mon–Fri 10am–6pm, Sat–Sun 10am–5pm
Thirty miles of fjord ending at two calving glaciers. Book the full-day boat before the ship docks — it fills first.
🕒 Boat excursions: May–Sep (full-day)
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Memorial library in juneau alaska by noehill.jpg)
Tlingit culture, the 1880 gold rush, and Juneau's odd decision to stay capital when the population moved. Small but sharp.
🕒 May–Sep: Mon–Fri 9am–6pm, Sat–Sun 10am–5pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (The Shrine of St. Therese.jpg)
A 1930s stone chapel on a tidal island, reached by causeway at low tide. Worth the 35-minute drive if the schedule allows.
🕒 May–Sep: daily dawn–dusk
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Whale sculpture in Mayor Bill Overstreet Park.jpg)
The downtown waterfront lawn where locals eat lunch and floatplanes land in the channel. Free, flat, and genuinely restorative.
🕒 Daily, dawn–dusk
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Creek Street(js)06.jpg)
Ketchikan's former red-light boardwalk now sells smoked salmon and art prints. The salmon below kept their lifestyle.
🕒 Boardwalk open 24 hr; shops ~9am–6pm (May–Sep cruise season)
Forest Service museum steps from the dock ($5 in summer) — the best rain shelter you'll find that also explains cedar and salmon.
🕒 May–Sep daily 8am–5pm; Oct–Apr Tue–Sat 10am–4:30pm
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (THCTotems.JPG)
Thirty-three 19th-century totems rescued from abandoned Tlingit villages — unrestored, unpainted, and more honest for it.
🕒 May–Sep daily 8am–5pm
Ketchikan's most famous madam ran a tidy operation here until 1954. The parlour is now the gift shop.
🕒 May–Sep daily when ships are in port
Watch chinook force their way upstream from the footbridge on Married Man's Trail. Free, every summer, and unexpectedly moving.
🕒 Open 24 hr; salmon runs peak Jul–Sep
Active Tlingit carving shed where master carvers work on commissioned poles — not demos for tourists, actual art in progress.
🕒 May–Sep daily; guided tours ~9am–4pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Totem Bight Community House, Mud Bight Village, North Tongass Highway, Ketchikan vicinity (Ketchikan Gateway Borough, Alaska).jpg)
Fourteen poles and a reconstructed clan house set in old-growth forest 12 km north — needs wheels, rewards the effort.
🕒 Open year-round daily; visitor facilities May–Sep
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Ketchikan from Deer Mountain.JPG)
Ketchikan's backyard summit: 3,001 feet from sea level, trailhead under 1 km from the dock. Old growth all the way up.
🕒 Open year-round; summit best May–Sep
A loop through old-growth Sitka spruce so tall they filter their own light. Sitka deer are a realistic sighting, 9 km from port.
🕒 Open year-round daily
Mostly locals, rarely cruise passengers — pebble cove with mountain views 6 km south. The ratio makes it worthwhile.
🕒 Open 24 hr
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Inside Passage (6).jpg)
Granite walls rise 900 m from tidewater, accessible only by floatplane or boat. A day trip that permanently recalibrates 'large'.
🕒 Excursion tours May–Sep daily (weather permitting)
We take no cruise-line commissions — nobody pays us to rank their ship. A few tour links are affiliate links: book through one and we earn a little, but it never buys a kinder word from us.
Before you sail — hotels in Seattle
Arrive a day early and explore Seattle before boarding
Pricing not available for this sailing.
Typical age
35-55
Primary markets
US · CA · AU · UK
Onboard languages
en
Kids onboard
Common — family-friendly programming