
October 11
Departure
7
nights
5
ports
$858
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$123
per night
7
nights
45/100
mainstream — extras sold separately
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this Oasis of the Seas Perfect Day Bahamas Cruise sailing from $123/night (inside). 7 nights departing October 11, 2026. 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 2
Cape CanaveralUnited StatesCruise from the Space Coast with Kennedy Space Center just a short drive away.


Day 4
NassauBahamasThe Bahamas' vibrant capital, with Atlantis resort and powdery beaches minutes 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.
Before you sail — hotels in Bayonne
Arrive a day early and explore Bayonne 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