
July 23
Departure
13
nights
7
ports
$3,717
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$286
per night
13
nights
45/100
mainstream — extras sold separately
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this Anthem of the Seas Grand Mountain Marvels & Wildlife Ultimate Cruisetour sailing from $286/night (inside). 13 nights departing July 23, 2027. Royal Caribbean International Perk Score: 45/100 — room service. Compare 4 cabin categories with real pricing data on GoCruiseTravel.com.
Not included
WiFi is priced per device, not per person. A family of four with phones and tablets can easily spend $100+/day. Pre-purchasing saves up to 30%.
An 18% gratuity is added on top of the drink package price at checkout. On a 7-night cruise this can add $50-80+ per person that wasn't in the advertised price.
Gratuities are automatically added to your onboard account. An additional 18% gratuity is also applied to all beverage, specialty dining, and room service purchases; 20% for spa services.
Only continental breakfast is truly free. A cooked American breakfast or any lunch/dinner order costs $7.95+tip per delivery. Grand Suite and above get free 24-hour room service.
An 18% gratuity is automatically added to all specialty dining charges on top of the menu price.
Automatic gratuities of $18.50/day (standard) or $21.00/day (suites) per person are charged daily to your onboard account. You can adjust at Guest Services but it is strongly discouraged.
Promotional 'free' perks (WiFi, drinks) are often bundled into a higher cruise fare rather than truly free. Always compare the promo fare against the base fare plus buying add-ons separately.
Royal Caribbean can increase gratuity rates at any time before sailing. Rates have risen multiple times in recent years, most recently in 2024.
An 18% gratuity is auto-added to all onboard purchases including drinks, specialty dining, room service, and minibar. Spa purchases have a 20% auto-gratuity.

Day 1
VancouverCanadaAlaska cruises depart from a stunning terminal in the heart of downtown Vancouver.
Day 2
KetchikanUnited StatesHome to the world's largest collection of standing totem poles and rich Alaska Native heritage.


Day 4
SitkaUnited StatesAlaska's former Russian capital blends onion-domed churches with a superb totem pole park.

Day 5
SkagwayUnited StatesGold Rush National Historic Landmark town with a still-running White Pass mountain railroad.

Day 7
SewardUnited StatesGateway to Kenai Fjords National Park, offering tidewater glaciers and exceptional wildlife watching.
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)
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Native Alaskan Totem Pole.JPG)
18 totem poles, old-growth forest trails, and the 1804 battlefield where the Tlingit stood against Russian colonizers.
🕒 Visitor center daily 9am–5pm (May–Sep); trails open dawn–dusk year-round
SightseeingPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (1827 illustration of Castle Hill (Old Sitka, Alaska) by Postels.jpg)
The exact spot where the Russian flag came down and the U.S. flag went up on Oct 18, 1867. Best panoramic view in Sitka, free.
🕒 Open year-round, daylight hours
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (St Michaels Cathedral - Sitka - back.JPG)
Burned down in 1966; rebuilt identically. Parishioners sprinted in and saved the 19th-century icons — they're originals.
🕒 Mon–Fri 9am–4pm, Sat 9am–noon (cruise season); closed to visitors Sun
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Russian Bishop House August 2005.JPG)
Built 1843, one of the oldest Russian structures surviving in North America. The bishop's second-floor chapel is largely intact.
🕒 Daily 9am–5pm (May–Sep); NPS fee applies
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Alaska Raptor Center (exterior view, 2010).jpg)
Bald eagle flight-training and raptor rehab facility. Injured eagles recover here — you get uncomfortably close to a live bird.
🕒 Daily 8am–4pm (May–Sep)
Alaska's oldest museum, founded 1887. The octagonal building holds a serious Alaska Native art collection: Tlingit, Yup'ik, Athabascan.
🕒 Tue–Sat 9am–4pm (May–Sep)
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Fortress of the Bear.jpg)
Rescued Alaskan brown bears live in a repurposed industrial tank outside town. Close enough to watch one scratch its own nose.
🕒 Daily 9am–5pm (May–Sep)
A wraparound boardwalk over Sitka Sound. Humpbacks breach offshore during herring runs — no ticket, no guarantee, decent odds.
🕒 Open year-round, daylight hours
Alaska's oldest active Lutheran congregation, founded 1843. The modest interior outlasted the empire that built it.
🕒 Open to visitors during daylight hours; Sunday morning services
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (St. Peter's-by-the-Sea Episcopal Church.jpg)
A 1899 stone chapel that looks borrowed from rural England. Still holding Sunday services for the same fishing families, more or less.
🕒 Open to visitors when not in use; services Sunday mornings
Compact survey of Tlingit, Russian, and American Sitka. Surprisingly deep for a one-room museum; the Tlingit beadwork is the standout.
🕒 Mon–Fri 9am–5pm (May–Sep); weekends by appointment
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.
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Kenai Fjords National Park.jpg)
Forty glaciers, one ice field. The NPS visitor center is in town; the real spectacle is a boat tour or the Exit Glacier road.
🕒 Visitor center daily 9:00–17:00 (May–Sep)
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Exit Glacier Jul09.JPG)
The only part of Kenai Fjords NP reachable by road. Walk to the glacier face, read the retreat stakes, feel appropriately humbled.
🕒 Nature Center May–Sep 9:00–17:00; trail year-round
CulturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Alaska Sealife Center.jpg)
The only Western Hemisphere facility built to rescue Alaska's marine wildlife. Seals, sea otters, and puffins — no boat required.
🕒 Daily 9:00–17:00 (May–Sep)
Working harbor and launch point for Kenai Fjords boat tours. Dockside salmon stands and sea otters who never read the posted signs.
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (ResurrectionBay Alaska.jpg)
The fjord Seward sits on. Mountains drop straight into salt water in every direction; your boat tour will go deeper, but start here.
AdventurePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Mount Marathon - 2011.jpg)
Race route of Alaska's most iconic July 4 race: 3,022 feet straight up, then back down. Most cruise visitors just admire from shore.
Fourteen-year-old Alaska Native orphan Benny Benson designed the state flag in 1927. His memorial is a short walk from the pier.
WWII fortifications on a headland accessible only by water taxi or tidal hike. Tide charts are not optional.
🕒 Seasonal May–Sep
WWII coastal gun emplacement whose cannons never fired in anger. The bunker roof view of Resurrection Bay alone justifies the water taxi.
🕒 Seasonal May–Sep
A short loop trail threading two glacial lakes at the foot of Mount Marathon — the town's lung, and it's free.
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 Vancouver
Arrive a day early and explore Vancouver before boarding
Quantum-class ship with cutting-edge technology. North Star observation capsule rises 300 feet above sea level. RipCord by iFLY skydiving simulator, bumper cars, and robotic bartenders at Bionic Bar. Excellent for tech-savvy families.
Typical age
35-55
Primary markets
US · UK · CA · AU · BR
Onboard languages
en · es · pt
Kids onboard
Common — family-friendly programming