
August 8
Departure
7
nights
5
ports
$703
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$100
per night
7
nights
48/100
mainstream — extras sold separately
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this MSC World America Eastern Caribbean & Bahamas sailing from $100/night (inside). 7 nights departing August 8, 2026. Compare 4 cabin categories with real pricing data on GoCruiseTravel.com.
Not included
The MSC for Me app works on the free ship network, but actual internet for browsing, email, or anything beyond the app requires a paid package.
Alcoholic drinks are capped at 15 per person per day with any drink package (since April 2025). All minors ages 3-20 in the cabin must purchase the Minors Package if adults buy a drink package.
Gratuities cannot be pre-paid online; you must call MSC customer service to pre-pay, or they are charged at the end of your cruise. Children ages 2 and up are charged the full daily gratuity.
Unlike some competitors, MSC does not offer free continental breakfast room service for standard cabin guests.
Daily gratuities of $17/person/night ($23 for Yacht Club) apply to all guests ages 2 and older on Caribbean & Alaska sailings from May 11, 2026. A family of four with two kids on a 7-night cruise pays $476 in gratuities alone.
All guests in the same cabin must purchase the same drink package tier, including minors ages 3-20 who must get the Minors Package if adults purchase any drink package.
MSC's advertised fares for the North American market are often very low but exclude gratuities, port fees, and government taxes that can add $200+ per person to the total.
Since April 2025, alcoholic drinks are capped at 15 per person per day even with an unlimited drink package. Non-alcoholic drinks remain truly unlimited.
Day 1
MiamiUnited StatesThe world's busiest cruise port, minutes from South Beach and downtown Miami.
Day 2
At Sea

Day 3
Puerto PlataDominican RepublicA resort-style cruise port on the Dominican Republic's scenic Amber Coast.
Day 4
San JuanPuerto RicoWalk straight off the ship into a historic colonial city with 500-year-old UNESCO-listed forts.
Day 5
At Sea
Day 6
At Sea

Day 8
MiamiUnited StatesThe world's busiest cruise port, minutes from South Beach and downtown Miami.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Coco Grove FL Vizcaya mansion01.jpg)
A farm-equipment heir built this 1916 Italian Renaissance villa to suggest he'd always owned one. Seventy rooms of European antiques, formal gardens, and a bay-side breakwater barge that's either Venice-inspired or Venice-stolen.
🕒 Wed–Mon 9:30am–4:30pm
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (PAMM MRD 23.jpg)
Herzog & de Meuron designed this waterfront museum with hanging gardens suspended over Biscayne Bay, and the contemporary art inside actually keeps up. Strong Latin American focus; second Saturdays are free, the bay view is free every day.
🕒 Thu–Mon 10am–6pm
Opened 2017 with a planetarium, multi-story aquarium viewable from below, and a living coral reef display that makes other science museums look underprepared. Modern, walkable from downtown, and genuinely worth a half-day.
🕒 Daily 9am–6pm
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Fairchild.jpg)
Eighty-three acres of rare tropical palms, cycads, and orchids — serious horticulture, no flamingo photo ops. The butterfly conservatory and rare fruit grove make it the kind of garden you stay three hours in without planning to.
🕒 Daily 9:30am–4:30pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Memoriale dell'olocausto di Miami Beach.jpg)
Kenneth Treister's 1990 memorial centers on a bronze arm reaching skyward, tattooed with numbers and figures climbing toward light. Give it a quieter slot in your day — it earns more time than most visitors plan for.
🕒 Daily 9am–9pm
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Wolfsonian FL1.jpg)
A 1927 storage warehouse repurposed to hold roughly 200,000 objects of propaganda, industrial design, and mass persuasion from 1885–1945 — the collection that makes you rethink every poster you ever trusted. Small enough to finish on a port day.
🕒 Mon–Tue, Thu–Sat 10am–6pm; Sun noon–6pm; closed Wed
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Bird's eye view of Lummus Park by the beach - Miami Beach, Florida.jpg)
White sand along Ocean Drive from 5th to 15th Street, backed by the pastel Art Deco hotels you've seen in every Miami photo. The colored lifeguard stands are as photogenic as advertised; the Atlantic is actually pretty warm.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (CapeFloridaLight.jpg)
Built in 1825 on Key Biscayne's southern tip — survived a Seminole attack, a deliberate fire, and two centuries of Florida weather. The climb earns simultaneous Atlantic-and-bay views that justify every step; access via Bill Baggs State Park.
🕒 Daily 8am–sunset; guided lighthouse tours Thu–Mon
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (HistoryMiami.jpg)
Downtown Miami's main history museum covers the Tequesta people, Prohibition rum-runners, and the cocaine 1980s without looking away from any of it. Small, honest, and a short ride from the cruise terminal.
🕒 Tue–Sun 10am–5pm
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Parrotjungleisland.jpg)
A tropical wildlife park on Watson Island between downtown and South Beach — flamingos, macaws, and animals that seem implausible until you're standing next to one. Best for travelers who want Florida nature without a three-hour Everglades detour.
🕒 Daily 10am–5pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Castillo San Felipe del Morro3.jpg)
Six levels of fortifications, 140-foot cliffs, and one lighthouse watching for enemies since 1539. The kite-flyers showed up instead.
🕒 Daily 9am–6pm
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Fort San Cristóbal (Puerto Rico) - IMG 0173.JPG)
The largest Spanish colonial fort in the Americas. Closest major sight to the cruise pier, and shares a ticket with El Morro.
🕒 Daily 9am–6pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Explanada del Paseo de La Princesa.jpg)
A promenade along the old city walls — fountain, vendors, and the Atlantic at the end of every vista. Free, flat, and reliably breezy.
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (LaFortaleza SanJuan PuertoRico.jpg)
The oldest executive mansion in the Western Hemisphere still in continuous use. Tours Mon–Fri; plan accordingly if you arrive on the weekend.
🕒 Mon–Fri, guided tours 9am–4pm
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Puerta San Juan SJU 06 2019 8631.jpg)
The last original city gate of Old San Juan, cut through the 400-year-old walls. Stand in it long enough and someone will take your photo.
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Catedral de San Juan Bautista a.jpg)
Ponce de León is buried inside, which means this cathedral has been on the sightseeing circuit since 1521.
🕒 Mon–Sat 8:30am–4pm, Sun 9am–noon
CultureClosed on your visit (Tuesday)Photo: Wikimedia Commons (San Juan - Casa Blanca.jpg)
Built for Ponce de León in 1521 — he never actually lived here, but his family managed the place for 250 years. Now a museum.
🕒 Wed–Sun 8am–noon & 1–4pm
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Calle del Cristo Intersection in San Juan, Puerto Rico.jpg)
A tiny chapel at the end of Calle del Cristo, built after a horse and rider allegedly fell off the city wall. The horse did not survive.
🕒 Tue–Sat 9am–noon
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (San José Catholic Church - San Juan.jpg)
The second-oldest Catholic church in the Americas, restored after decades of closure. The Gothic vaulting hasn't changed since 1532.
🕒 Tue–Sat 9am–4pm
Food & DrinkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Bacardi building in Cataño, Puerto Rico.jpg)
A $2 ferry hop to Cataño, then the world's largest rum distillery. Tours from $40; samples are included — do the math yourself.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9am–4:30pm
CultureClosed on your visit (Tuesday)Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico.jpg)
More than 1,000 years of Puerto Rican art in a converted hospital in Santurce. The colonial courtyard alone is worth the cab ride.
🕒 Wed–Sun 10am–5pm (Thu until 8pm)
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Condado Beach - San Juan.jpg)
The closest decent beach to Old San Juan — hotels line the strip, but the water doesn't ask for a room key.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Coco Grove FL Vizcaya mansion01.jpg)
A farm-equipment heir built this 1916 Italian Renaissance villa to suggest he'd always owned one. Seventy rooms of European antiques, formal gardens, and a bay-side breakwater barge that's either Venice-inspired or Venice-stolen.
🕒 Wed–Mon 9:30am–4:30pm
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (PAMM MRD 23.jpg)
Herzog & de Meuron designed this waterfront museum with hanging gardens suspended over Biscayne Bay, and the contemporary art inside actually keeps up. Strong Latin American focus; second Saturdays are free, the bay view is free every day.
🕒 Thu–Mon 10am–6pm
Opened 2017 with a planetarium, multi-story aquarium viewable from below, and a living coral reef display that makes other science museums look underprepared. Modern, walkable from downtown, and genuinely worth a half-day.
🕒 Daily 9am–6pm
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Fairchild.jpg)
Eighty-three acres of rare tropical palms, cycads, and orchids — serious horticulture, no flamingo photo ops. The butterfly conservatory and rare fruit grove make it the kind of garden you stay three hours in without planning to.
🕒 Daily 9:30am–4:30pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Memoriale dell'olocausto di Miami Beach.jpg)
Kenneth Treister's 1990 memorial centers on a bronze arm reaching skyward, tattooed with numbers and figures climbing toward light. Give it a quieter slot in your day — it earns more time than most visitors plan for.
🕒 Daily 9am–9pm
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Wolfsonian FL1.jpg)
A 1927 storage warehouse repurposed to hold roughly 200,000 objects of propaganda, industrial design, and mass persuasion from 1885–1945 — the collection that makes you rethink every poster you ever trusted. Small enough to finish on a port day.
🕒 Mon–Tue, Thu–Sat 10am–6pm; Sun noon–6pm; closed Wed
BeachPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Bird's eye view of Lummus Park by the beach - Miami Beach, Florida.jpg)
White sand along Ocean Drive from 5th to 15th Street, backed by the pastel Art Deco hotels you've seen in every Miami photo. The colored lifeguard stands are as photogenic as advertised; the Atlantic is actually pretty warm.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (CapeFloridaLight.jpg)
Built in 1825 on Key Biscayne's southern tip — survived a Seminole attack, a deliberate fire, and two centuries of Florida weather. The climb earns simultaneous Atlantic-and-bay views that justify every step; access via Bill Baggs State Park.
🕒 Daily 8am–sunset; guided lighthouse tours Thu–Mon
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (HistoryMiami.jpg)
Downtown Miami's main history museum covers the Tequesta people, Prohibition rum-runners, and the cocaine 1980s without looking away from any of it. Small, honest, and a short ride from the cruise terminal.
🕒 Tue–Sun 10am–5pm
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Parrotjungleisland.jpg)
A tropical wildlife park on Watson Island between downtown and South Beach — flamingos, macaws, and animals that seem implausible until you're standing next to one. Best for travelers who want Florida nature without a three-hour Everglades detour.
🕒 Daily 10am–5pm
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 Miami
Arrive a day early and explore Miami before boarding
MSC's first World-class ship purpose-built for North America. LNG-powered sister to MSC World Europa, homeporting in Miami year-round. Headline features include the first Eataly restaurant at sea, an over-water swing ride 160 ft above the ocean, an 11-deck dry slide, and the exclusive MSC Yacht Club ship-within-a-ship. With 22 decks, 19 dining venues, and 7 pools including a rooftop infinity pool, it is the most ambitious MSC build to date.
Typical age
35-65
Primary markets
IT · DE · FR · ES · UK · US
Onboard languages
it · de · fr · es · en
Kids onboard
Common — family-friendly programming