
April 23
Departure
5
nights
4
ports
$824
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$165
per night
5
nights
45/100
mainstream — extras sold separately
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this Oasis of the Seas Perfect Day at CocoCay & Caribbean sailing from $165/night (inside). 5 nights departing April 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
Fort LauderdaleUnited StatesA top embarkation hub with one of the easiest airport-to-port connections in the U.S.

Day 4
Fort LauderdaleUnited StatesA top embarkation hub with one of the easiest airport-to-port connections in the U.S.
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.
Before you sail — hotels in Fort Lauderdale
Arrive a day early and explore Fort Lauderdale before boarding
The ship that revolutionized cruising. Pioneer of the neighborhood concept with Central Park, Boardwalk, and Royal Promenade. Recently amplified with new waterslides, dining, and entertainment. Great value for a mega-ship experience.
Typical age
35-55
Primary markets
US · UK · CA · AU · BR
Onboard languages
en · es · pt
Kids onboard
Common — family-friendly programming