
September 20
Departure
5
nights
5
ports
$424
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$85
per night
5
nights
42/100
mainstream — extras sold separately
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this Carnival Mardi Gras The Bahamas sailing from $85/night (inside). 5 nights departing September 20, 2027. Carnival Cruise Line Perk Score: 42/100 — room service. Compare 4 cabin categories with real pricing data on GoCruiseTravel.com.
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
Cape CanaveralUnited StatesCruise from the Space Coast with Kennedy Space Center just a short drive away.

Day 3
NassauBahamasThe Bahamas' vibrant capital, with Atlantis resort and powdery beaches minutes away.
Day 5
At Sea
Day 6
Cape CanaveralUnited StatesCruise from the Space Coast with Kennedy Space Center just a short drive away.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Aerial View of Launch Complex 39.jpg)
A full Saturn V rocket laid horizontal for inspection — 363 feet of the hardware that put people on the moon. The Apollo/Saturn V Center, Rocket Garden, and bus tours to historic Launch Complex 39 are all on one ticket. Plan four hours minimum.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (hours vary; check ahead — closed some launch days)
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (STS132 Atlantis undocking2 (cropped).jpg)
Thirty-three missions, now suspended at the angle it held in orbit with payload bay doors open for good. Inside KSC on the same ticket — and yes, people cry in there.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (included with KSC Visitor Complex admission)
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Indian River Lagoon National Scenic Byway - Clouds Over Cocoa Beach - NARA - 7719507.jpg)
Atlantic beach about 15 minutes south of the port, with the famous Ron Jon Surf Shop — a two-story surf emporium worth walking through even if you've never touched a board. Easy half-day.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Kennedy Space Center (36017532512).jpg)
Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo artifacts alongside the biography of every inductee — it's inside KSC now on the same ticket. If you've ever wanted to see what John Glenn looked like at 20, this is the building.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (included with KSC Visitor Complex admission)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Amf space mirror.jpg)
A 42-foot polished black granite mirror reflecting the Florida sky, inscribed with the names of astronauts who died in service. Not the loudest thing at KSC — and probably the one you'll think about on the ship.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (accessible during KSC Visitor Complex hours)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Fort Charlotte, Nassau, The Bahamas.jpg)
Nassau's largest fort took three governors and several decades to build — dry moat, drawbridge, dungeon — yet never fired a shot in anger because no enemy ever bothered to attack. The irony is very Bahamian.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Queen's staircase, Nassau, Bahamas.jpg)
Sixty-six steps carved from solid limestone by enslaved workers in the 1790s, tucked in a shaded ravine a short walk from downtown. Free, relentlessly photographed, and somehow still worth doing.
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Flamingos -Ardastra Gardens-8k.jpg)
The flamingo — national bird of the Bahamas — marches on command here at scheduled shows, which is charming or slightly concerning depending on your views of flamingo dignity. Nassau's only zoo, and worth the ticket.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9:00–16:30
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Fort Fincastle.JPG)
Built in 1793 in the shape of a paddle-wheel steamer, Fort Fincastle sits on the hill directly above the Queen's Staircase — do both in the same trip. The harbour views from the top are worth more than the fort itself.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (NAGB Villa Doyle Building.jpg)
Bahamian art from colonial times to now, inside the Villa Doyle — a fine 1860s mansion that works better as a gallery than it ever did as a private home. Small enough to finish in an hour; good enough that you won't rush.
🕒 Tue–Sat 10:00–16:00
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (The Royal Tower Atlantis Paradise Island photo Don Ramey Logan.jpg)
A Caribbean mega-resort built around the Atlantis myth — waterpark, casino, and enough faux-ancient architecture to confuse a classicist. Non-guests can explore the public lobby areas and casino; the waterpark requires a day pass at significant expense.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (BahamianGovernmentHouse.JPG)
The Governor-General's official residence: a pink colonial mansion atop a hill, flanked by a statue of Columbus and a changing-of-the-guard ceremony on the first Saturday of each month. Admired freely from the street on any other day.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (BahamianParliamentPanorama.jpg)
Parliament Square: pink colonial buildings from 1815, a statue of Queen Victoria looking appropriately unamused, and the working legislature of an island nation. A short walk from the wharf, and free to admire from the outside.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Downtown Nassau - 2025 - Nassau Public Library (2).jpg)
Built around 1800 as an octagonal prison, Nassau's public library traded the cells for shelves and kept the ironwork. A five-minute detour that earns its place on any downtown Nassau walk.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Aerial View of Launch Complex 39.jpg)
A full Saturn V rocket laid horizontal for inspection — 363 feet of the hardware that put people on the moon. The Apollo/Saturn V Center, Rocket Garden, and bus tours to historic Launch Complex 39 are all on one ticket. Plan four hours minimum.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (hours vary; check ahead — closed some launch days)
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (STS132 Atlantis undocking2 (cropped).jpg)
Thirty-three missions, now suspended at the angle it held in orbit with payload bay doors open for good. Inside KSC on the same ticket — and yes, people cry in there.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (included with KSC Visitor Complex admission)
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Indian River Lagoon National Scenic Byway - Clouds Over Cocoa Beach - NARA - 7719507.jpg)
Atlantic beach about 15 minutes south of the port, with the famous Ron Jon Surf Shop — a two-story surf emporium worth walking through even if you've never touched a board. Easy half-day.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Kennedy Space Center (36017532512).jpg)
Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo artifacts alongside the biography of every inductee — it's inside KSC now on the same ticket. If you've ever wanted to see what John Glenn looked like at 20, this is the building.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (included with KSC Visitor Complex admission)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Amf space mirror.jpg)
A 42-foot polished black granite mirror reflecting the Florida sky, inscribed with the names of astronauts who died in service. Not the loudest thing at KSC — and probably the one you'll think about on the ship.
🕒 9:00 am – 5:00 pm daily (accessible during KSC Visitor Complex hours)
Before you sail — hotels in Cape Canaveral
Arrive a day early and explore Cape Canaveral before boarding
First Excel-class ship and first cruise ship in the Americas with a roller coaster. Named after Carnival's original ship, it blends New Orleans-inspired fun with cutting-edge entertainment. Six themed zones from French Quarter to Summer Landing.
Typical age
35-55
Primary markets
US · CA · AU · UK
Onboard languages
en
Kids onboard
Common — family-friendly programming