October 22
Departure
4
nights
3
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 4
At Sea
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (French Quarter, looking north with Mississippi River to the right 2011.jpg)
Ironwork balconies, live brass bands, and heat that's 40% humidity and 60% music. Explore before noon before it becomes a party.
🕒 Always open
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Cathedral new orleans.jpg)
The oldest continuously active cathedral in the United States, presiding over Jackson Square since 1727. Free to enter.
🕒 Mon–Sat 8am–5pm, Sun 9am–6pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Main entrance to the National World War II Museum.jpg)
Consistently ranked among America's best museums. The D-Day galleries hit harder than any textbook ever will. Budget half a day.
🕒 Daily 9am–5pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Бурбон-стрит.jpg)
Famous for noise, neon, and bad decisions. Walk it before noon when it's just a street with great balconies and genuine history.
🕒 Always open
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Cabildo9Jul07SousaphoneFront.jpg)
The Louisiana Purchase — 828,000 square miles — was transferred in this building in 1803. Now a state museum; still on Jackson Square.
🕒 Daily 9am–4pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Frenchmen Decatur Down Lake Dec2013.jpg)
The anti-Bourbon: where actual New Orleanians go for live jazz and blues. No cover at most venues, serious talent every night.
🕒 Evenings and late night
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Aquarium of the Americas, New Orleans, after Katrina.jpg)
World-class freshwater and marine exhibits one block from the Mississippi. The resident white alligator is albino — not a prop.
🕒 Daily 10am–5pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Mardi Gras World (8542980567).jpg)
The working warehouse where 80% of Mardi Gras floats are built year-round. A 45-minute guided tour that genuinely surprises everyone.
🕒 Daily 9am–4:30pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons
New Orleans' oldest cemetery (1789), where above-ground tombs predate the city grid. Entry by guided tour only — book before you sail.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9am–3pm, Sun 9am–noon (guided tours only)
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons
America's most iconic jazz venue: 100 people, no drinks, benches only. Shows run nightly at 8pm, 9pm, and 10pm — no reservations needed.
🕒 Nightly from 8pm
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Los Murcielagos, San Gervasio.JPG)
Cozumel's only surviving Maya ceremonial complex, built for Ix Chel — goddess of fertility — back when women made cross-sea pilgrimages here. Modest ruins by Chichen Itza standards; resident iguanas included at no extra charge.
🕒 Daily 8 am–4 pm
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Cozumel Western Shore Sunset-27527.jpg)
The reef system that made Cozumel diving famous — visibility consistently exceeding 30 metres, coral walls dropping hundreds of feet, and an ecosystem healthy enough to earn national park protection in 1996. Access is via snorkel or dive boat — no pier, no ticket booth, which is precisely the point.
A 1,000-acre eco-park at Cozumel's southern tip: crocodile lagoon, working lighthouse, Mayan watchtower ruins, and coastline too rough to swim — which keeps it dramatically photogenic and refreshingly uncrowded. One entry fee; bring more sunscreen than seems reasonable.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–4 pm
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Faro Celarain Punta Sur Cozumel feb 2011.JPG)
An early 20th-century working lighthouse at Cozumel's southernmost point — inside Punta Sur eco-park — climbable for views of the churning channel below. The keeper's quarters serve as a compact maritime museum; the breeze at the top is not optional.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–4 pm
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Chen Rio.jpg)
The standout beach on Cozumel's exposed Caribbean side — natural rock formations create a sheltered cove where swimming is genuinely possible while the open sea crashes dramatically just beyond. Stays emptier than western shore beach clubs because reaching it requires a taxi and a tolerance for potholed road. The palapa restaurant serves cold beer and fresh fish; the commute justifies both.
ViewpointPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (El Mirador (9504463382).jpg)
A natural ironshore ledge on the east coast road where open Caribbean swells crash in proper dramatic fashion. Free admission; soaked shoes are optional but statistically likely.
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (French Quarter, looking north with Mississippi River to the right 2011.jpg)
Ironwork balconies, live brass bands, and heat that's 40% humidity and 60% music. Explore before noon before it becomes a party.
🕒 Always open
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Cathedral new orleans.jpg)
The oldest continuously active cathedral in the United States, presiding over Jackson Square since 1727. Free to enter.
🕒 Mon–Sat 8am–5pm, Sun 9am–6pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Main entrance to the National World War II Museum.jpg)
Consistently ranked among America's best museums. The D-Day galleries hit harder than any textbook ever will. Budget half a day.
🕒 Daily 9am–5pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Бурбон-стрит.jpg)
Famous for noise, neon, and bad decisions. Walk it before noon when it's just a street with great balconies and genuine history.
🕒 Always open
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Cabildo9Jul07SousaphoneFront.jpg)
The Louisiana Purchase — 828,000 square miles — was transferred in this building in 1803. Now a state museum; still on Jackson Square.
🕒 Daily 9am–4pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Frenchmen Decatur Down Lake Dec2013.jpg)
The anti-Bourbon: where actual New Orleanians go for live jazz and blues. No cover at most venues, serious talent every night.
🕒 Evenings and late night
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Aquarium of the Americas, New Orleans, after Katrina.jpg)
World-class freshwater and marine exhibits one block from the Mississippi. The resident white alligator is albino — not a prop.
🕒 Daily 10am–5pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Mardi Gras World (8542980567).jpg)
The working warehouse where 80% of Mardi Gras floats are built year-round. A 45-minute guided tour that genuinely surprises everyone.
🕒 Daily 9am–4:30pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons
New Orleans' oldest cemetery (1789), where above-ground tombs predate the city grid. Entry by guided tour only — book before you sail.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9am–3pm, Sun 9am–noon (guided tours only)
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons
America's most iconic jazz venue: 100 people, no drinks, benches only. Shows run nightly at 8pm, 9pm, and 10pm — no reservations needed.
🕒 Nightly from 8pm
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 New Orleans
Arrive a day early and explore New Orleans 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