October 2
Departure
9
nights
7
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 2
At Sea
Day 3
At Sea


Day 5
KotorMontenegroA medieval walled city at the foot of dramatic mountains in Europe's southernmost fjord.


Day 8
At Sea

LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Colosseo 2020.jpg)
Rome's 50,000-seat amphitheatre where emperors distracted citizens for 350 years with a spectacle they couldn't unsee. Book tickets online — the same-day queue is a gladiatorial contest in its own right.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; advance booking essential
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Mura vaticane - ingresso ai Musei 00410.JPG)
A labyrinth of papal acquisitions culminating in the Sistine Chapel — Michelangelo spent four years on scaffolding so you'd spend thirty seconds craning your neck. Book online; the walk-up queue is a penance the Church did not design.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–6 pm (last entry 4 pm); closed all Sundays except last Sunday of month
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano September 2015-1a.jpg)
Rome's most famous church, built atop Saint Peter's tomb and scaled to make you feel appropriately small. Entry is free — though the dress code enforcer at the door will turn away bare shoulders without theological debate.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm (summer) / 7 am–6:30 pm (winter); dome climb separately ticketed
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Foro Romano Musei Capitolini Roma.jpg)
The political heart of ancient Rome, now a wide field of columns, arches, and marble worn by two millennia of weather. Same ticket as the Colosseum and Palatine Hill — three ruins for the price of one existential crisis.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Palatine Hill ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palatine Hill.Pavement.jpg)
The hill where Rome's emperors built their palaces, now offering sweeping views over the Forum below and a welcome excuse to sit down. Covered by the same ticket as the Colosseum and Roman Forum.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Roman Forum ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Pantheon (Rome) - Right side and front.jpg)
A Roman temple from 125 AD in unbroken use for nearly 1,900 years — which predates the Christianity that eventually claimed it. Entry now requires a ticket; locals have opinions about this development.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–7 pm, Sun 9 am–6 pm; entry ticket required
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Trevi Fountain - Roma.jpg)
Baroque Rome's most theatrical plumbing: 26 metres of Neptune, sea horses, and cascading water engineered to make you throw a coin and book a return trip. Arrive before 8 am or after 10 pm for photos without strangers in every frame.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Castel_Sant'Angelo_at_Night.jpg)
A mausoleum for emperors turned papal refuge turned prison turned museum — Rome's most over-qualified building. The rooftop has sweeping views of the Tiber and St. Peter's dome, which more than justifies the climb.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9 am–7:30 pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (San Giovanni in Laterano 2021.jpg)
Rome's actual cathedral — not St. Peter's, despite what every tourist assumes — and the oldest public church in Rome still in active use. Free to enter, far fewer crowds than the Vatican, and a nave that makes most European cathedrals feel modest.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore - Roma.jpg)
One of Rome's four great basilicas, with 5th-century mosaics still intact on the triumphal arch — the gift shop outside is a 21st-century addition. Free to enter and reliably less crowded than anything near the Vatican.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry
The second largest church in Rome, largely rebuilt after an 1823 fire — so most of what you see is 19th-century, which in Rome counts as practically new. Free entry; the cloister has a separate ticket and earns it.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Diocletian's Palace (original appearance).jpg)
A Roman emperor's retirement villa—still occupied 1,700 years later. The Peristyle square still hosts open-air opera.
🕒 Open 24/7 (palace exterior); individual sites 8am–7pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (SvDuje.jpg)
The oldest cathedral in continuous use—built inside Diocletian's own mausoleum. Climb the bell tower for the best rooftop view of old Split.
🕒 Mon–Sat 8am–7pm, Sun 12:30–6:30pm
Split's open-air living room: palm trees, espresso, the palace wall as backdrop, and the whole Adriatic doing nothing in particular.
🕒 Open 24/7
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (J32 370 Diokletianspalast, »Goldenes Tor«.jpg)
The palace's grandest gate, guarded by Meštrović's towering Gregory of Nin. Touch the bishop's toe—apparently that's the deal here.
🕒 Open 24/7
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (20130603 Split 139.jpg)
Pagan temple repurposed as a Christian baptistery in the 7th century. The Roman coffered ceiling survived both conversions, somehow.
🕒 Daily 9am–7pm (summer)
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Klis Fortress - a view from south-west.jpg)
Six centuries of Ottoman-Venetian siege at 360m elevation. Game of Thrones filmed here—the view over Split makes the strategy obvious.
🕒 Daily 9am–7pm (Apr–Oct)
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Marjan from the Riva.jpg)
Split's pine-forest escape above the Adriatic. Easy trails, sea views, old hermit chapels—and zero souvenir stalls.
🕒 Open 24/7
Sandy, shallow, warm—and home to picigin, where locals dive spectacularly to stop a ball from touching the water. Excellent spectator sport.
🕒 Open 24/7
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Episcopal Center (Salona) 03.jpg)
Diocletian's hometown—a Roman city of 60,000 now reduced to atmospheric ruins. The backstory that makes the palace 5km away make sense.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9am–8pm (Jun–Aug), 9am–7pm (Apr–May, Sep), 9am–6pm (Oct)
CultureClosed on your visit (Monday)Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Split-Mestrovic-Galerie-02.jpg)
Croatia's greatest sculptor built this seafront villa as his showcase. The architecture competes hard with the bronze. Both win.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9am–7pm (summer)
CultureClosed on your visit (Monday)Photo: Wikimedia Commons (20210305 Split 001.jpg)
Two millennia of Split's history, packed into a 15th-century Gothic palace. Roman, Byzantine, Venetian—all stacked in one building.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9am–8pm
ViewpointPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Old Kotor.jpg)
Medieval walls zigzag 4.5 km up the cliff behind the Old Town, ending at the Castle of San Giovanni roughly 260 m above sea level — reached by some 1,350 stone steps. On a clear day you see the whole Bay of Kotor, and how far your knees still had to go.
🕒 Open daily approx. 08:00–sunset (ticketed; shorter hours Oct–Apr)
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Kotor - Cathédrale St Tryphon.JPG)
Romanesque twin-towered cathedral from 1166, where St. Tryphon's relics have outlasted earthquakes and plagues. The Treasury's Venetian goldsmithery is worth the modest entrance fee.
🕒 Approx. 09:00–17:00 daily (hours vary; may close briefly for services)
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Cattaro, porta del mare, 1555, 01.JPG)
The 1555 stone arch most cruise passengers walk through to enter the Old Town. The lion of St. Mark above it is a polite reminder that Venice ran things here for four centuries.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Church of Our Lady of the Rocks 3.jpg)
A church on a man-made island built by sailors who dumped rocks overboard every time they survived a storm. Short boat ride from Perast (~15 min drive from Kotor); the ceiling frescoes were painted by Tripo Kokolja over roughly 25 years.
🕒 Boat from Perast waterfront (approx. May–Oct); church open approx. 09:00–18:00
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Pomorski muzej Crne Gore.jpg)
Three floors of Adriatic naval history inside a Baroque palace in the Old Town, from Venetian galleys to 20th-century trade routes. Small, well-curated, and mercifully air-conditioned on a hot port day.
🕒 Approx. 09:00–18:00 (Tue–Sun; reduced hours in low season)
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Lovcen-011-p1010050.jpg)
The karst mountain rising behind Kotor, reached by a serpentine road of 25 hairpin bends with panoramic views of the entire Bay. Budget a half-day from port; most cruise excursions pair it with the Njegoš Mausoleum at the summit.
🕒 Open year-round; park entrance fee applies
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Lovcen.jpg)
Montenegro's poet-prince is entombed in a granite temple on the summit of Jezerski vrh (1,657 m), reached by 461 steps from the car park. Designed by Ivan Meštrović; on a clear day you can see as far as Albania. Typically visited as part of a Lovćen half-day excursion from Kotor.
🕒 Approx. 09:00–17:00 (May–Oct); closed or limited access in winter
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Clock Tower in Kotor (1).JPG)
The 17th-century tower at the centre of Arms Square, Kotor's main piazza, next to the stone pillar where the town once chained its wrongdoers. The square is now mostly cats and espresso — the wrongdoers moved on.
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Jaz beach 11.jpg)
A 900-metre arc of sand and pebble between Budva and Tivat, one of Montenegro's largest beaches and a former Rolling Stones concert venue. About 40 minutes by road from Kotor; come here if you'd rather swim than climb 1,350 steps.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Lipci rock art1.jpg)
Bronze Age petroglyphs carved into the hillside above the coastal road, believed to date to around 1000 BC. The deer-hunting scenes are accessible from the road and read as surprisingly legible three millennia later.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Dubrovnik Stadtmauer.jpg)
The 2km walk atop Dubrovnik's medieval walls is the must-do first stop — Adriatic views on one side, terracotta rooftops on the other. Go early or late; midday in summer is a stairclimber class in a slow-cooker with queues.
🕒 daily; summer approx. 08:00–19:30, winter approx. 09:00–15:00
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Fort Lovrijenac,Dubrovnik,Croatia.jpg)
A fortress on a 37-metre cliff just outside the city walls with 'Freedom cannot be sold for all the gold in the world' carved above the gate. GoT fans know it as the Red Keep's exterior — the inscription aged particularly well.
🕒 daily; summer approx. 08:00–19:30, winter approx. 09:00–15:00
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Rector's palace.jpg)
Gothic-Renaissance palace where the republic's rector served his one-month term without leaving — essentially a very ornate prison. Now a museum of Ragusan history; the atrium hosts summer concerts genuinely worth planning around.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Dubrovnik (57).JPG)
The monastery pharmacy has operated since 1317 — one of the oldest in the world, and still selling lotions today. The Romanesque cloister is the quiet escape tourists keep walking past on Stradun.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Vrata od Pila-Dubrovnik.JPG)
The 15th-century double drawbridge gate everyone walks through to enter the Old Town — pause at the niche above for St Blaise's statue, then keep moving or you'll block 47 people's photos. Free to walk through.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Big Onofrios Fountain (4059901219).jpg)
The 1438 sixteen-spouted fountain just inside Pile Gate was built to deliver fresh water to a medieval city — and the water still runs, which surprises most visitors. The large version; there's also a small one at the other end of Stradun.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Cattedrale Dubrovnik.JPG)
The baroque cathedral's real draw is the treasury — a golden reliquary holding St Blaise's skull, among other relics the Ragusans deemed worth preserving for 900 years. Free to enter the church; the treasury charges a small fee.
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Banje Beach.jpg)
The nearest proper beach to the Old Town offers arguably the best view of the city walls from water level. Sun loungers will cost you; the Adriatic won't — wade in and you'll understand why everyone who swam here remembers it.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Fort Imperial.JPG)
Cable car to Mount Srđ's summit delivers the panorama that makes Dubrovnik's layout finally click — walls, harbor, and islands in one frame. Fort Imperial at the top houses the War of Independence Museum, a sobering counterpoint.
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Lokrom-bs-14.jpg)
Ten minutes by ferry from Old Town harbor, Lokrum is a nature reserve with free-roaming peacocks, a ruined Benedictine monastery, and a salt lagoon locals call the Dead Sea. The shade alone is worth the ticket in summer.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Arboretum Trsteno (by Pudelek).JPG)
A Renaissance garden 12km up the coast with ancient plane trees and the fountain courtyard used as King's Landing gardens in Game of Thrones seasons 1–4. Worth the bus ride if Westeros was your actual reason for booking this cruise.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Dubrovnik-dominics1.png)
The 14th-century Dominican monastery at the east end of Stradun hides Dubrovnik's best Renaissance paintings — including a Titian — and a cloister measurably quieter than the main drag. Easy to miss; unreasonably worth the detour.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli - panoramio (1).jpg)
The world's greatest hoard of Pompeii and Herculaneum finds — mosaics, bronze statues, and frescoes that outlasted the empire that made them. Bring half a day; the Secret Cabinet alone earns the taxi fare.
🕒 9:00–19:30, closed Tue
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Immagine d'insieme 2, Cappella Sansevero.jpg)
Tiny 18th-century chapel housing the Veiled Christ — a marble sculpture so impossibly delicate that visitors accused the artist of witchcraft. He was merely a genius. Timed tickets required.
🕒 Mon & Wed–Sat 10:00–18:40; Sun 10:00–14:00; closed Tue
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Naples-Castel Nuovo.jpg)
The hulking medieval castle guarding Naples' waterfront since 1279 — you can't miss it walking from the port, and you probably shouldn't try. The Renaissance triumphal arch wedged between its towers is one of Italy's odder design choices.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Castel dell' Ovo.jpg)
Naples' oldest castle, built on a tiny islet and named for a magic egg Virgil allegedly buried in its foundations. The egg is still there somewhere; the harbor views and free entry are confirmed.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Naples duomo facade.jpg)
Home to San Gennaro's blood, which liquefies three times a year before crowds that respond with more intensity than most sporting events. The cathedral layers 2,000 years of architecture with cheerful stylistic disregard.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palazzo Reale di Napoli.jpg)
Eight dynasties renovated this palace and left their names on the exterior statues; the Bourbon throne room alone contains enough velvet for a small fleet. The piazza it faces is southern Italy's best free attraction.
🕒 Thu–Tue 9:00–20:00
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Certosa di San Martino from Sant'Elmo.jpg)
A 14th-century Carthusian monastery on Vomero hill, converted into a museum with a cloister that is arguably the most beautiful in southern Italy. The views of the bay from its terraces are simply unfair.
🕒 Wed–Mon 8:30–19:30
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Napoli s Elmo da Castel dell'Ovo 1040688.JPG)
A 14th-century star-shaped fortress on Vomero — five minutes from Certosa and considerably less ornate. Its one great talent is a panorama that sweeps from the full bay of Naples to Vesuvius and the Phlegraean islands in a single look.
🕒 Wed–Mon 8:30–19:30
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Monastero di SantaChiaraNaples.jpg)
14th-century church rebuilt after a 1943 bombing — the Gothic replacement is genuinely better than what was lost. The real draw is the majolica-tiled cloister behind it: yellow and turquoise rural scenes that are inexplicably cheerful.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Reggia di Capodimonte 1.JPG)
One of Italy's great art museums — Titian, Caravaggio, El Greco — housed in an 18th-century royal palace on a wooded hill north of center. Worth the taxi if you'd rather argue about Raphael than castle views.
🕒 Thu–Tue 8:30–19:30
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Colosseo 2020.jpg)
Rome's 50,000-seat amphitheatre where emperors distracted citizens for 350 years with a spectacle they couldn't unsee. Book tickets online — the same-day queue is a gladiatorial contest in its own right.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; advance booking essential
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Mura vaticane - ingresso ai Musei 00410.JPG)
A labyrinth of papal acquisitions culminating in the Sistine Chapel — Michelangelo spent four years on scaffolding so you'd spend thirty seconds craning your neck. Book online; the walk-up queue is a penance the Church did not design.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–6 pm (last entry 4 pm); closed all Sundays except last Sunday of month
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano September 2015-1a.jpg)
Rome's most famous church, built atop Saint Peter's tomb and scaled to make you feel appropriately small. Entry is free — though the dress code enforcer at the door will turn away bare shoulders without theological debate.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm (summer) / 7 am–6:30 pm (winter); dome climb separately ticketed
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Foro Romano Musei Capitolini Roma.jpg)
The political heart of ancient Rome, now a wide field of columns, arches, and marble worn by two millennia of weather. Same ticket as the Colosseum and Palatine Hill — three ruins for the price of one existential crisis.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Palatine Hill ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palatine Hill.Pavement.jpg)
The hill where Rome's emperors built their palaces, now offering sweeping views over the Forum below and a welcome excuse to sit down. Covered by the same ticket as the Colosseum and Roman Forum.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Roman Forum ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Pantheon (Rome) - Right side and front.jpg)
A Roman temple from 125 AD in unbroken use for nearly 1,900 years — which predates the Christianity that eventually claimed it. Entry now requires a ticket; locals have opinions about this development.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–7 pm, Sun 9 am–6 pm; entry ticket required
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Trevi Fountain - Roma.jpg)
Baroque Rome's most theatrical plumbing: 26 metres of Neptune, sea horses, and cascading water engineered to make you throw a coin and book a return trip. Arrive before 8 am or after 10 pm for photos without strangers in every frame.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Castel_Sant'Angelo_at_Night.jpg)
A mausoleum for emperors turned papal refuge turned prison turned museum — Rome's most over-qualified building. The rooftop has sweeping views of the Tiber and St. Peter's dome, which more than justifies the climb.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9 am–7:30 pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (San Giovanni in Laterano 2021.jpg)
Rome's actual cathedral — not St. Peter's, despite what every tourist assumes — and the oldest public church in Rome still in active use. Free to enter, far fewer crowds than the Vatican, and a nave that makes most European cathedrals feel modest.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore - Roma.jpg)
One of Rome's four great basilicas, with 5th-century mosaics still intact on the triumphal arch — the gift shop outside is a 21st-century addition. Free to enter and reliably less crowded than anything near the Vatican.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry
The second largest church in Rome, largely rebuilt after an 1823 fire — so most of what you see is 19th-century, which in Rome counts as practically new. Free entry; the cloister has a separate ticket and earns it.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
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 Rome
Arrive a day early and explore Rome 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