The Weirdly Cheap Cruise That Crosses the Entire Atlantic Ocean
When cruise ships relocate between seasons, the deals are absurd and the sea days are endless. The insider's guide to repositioning cruises.
Here's something the cruise industry doesn't advertise loudly: twice a year, ships need to get from Point A to Point B. The Caribbean fleet moves to Europe in spring. The European fleet comes back in autumn. The Alaska ships reposition to Hawaii, the Panama Canal, or Asia.
The ships are going anyway. The crew is aboard. The restaurants are open. The pools are filled. The only question is whether the cabins are empty or occupied.
So they sell them cheap. Really cheap. And the cruises are kind of perfect.
A repositioning cruise is the travel industry's most elegant accident: a voyage that exists purely for logistical reasons, sold to passengers at a discount, and beloved by the exact kind of person who thinks "twelve consecutive days at sea" sounds like heaven rather than punishment.
How It Works
Cruise ships follow the weather. Caribbean in winter, Mediterranean and Northern Europe in summer, Alaska from May to September. When seasons change, ships must physically move between regions.
A ship leaving Fort Lauderdale for Barcelona in April can't teleport. It needs 10–16 days to cross the Atlantic, depending on the route and whether it stops at the Azores, Madeira, or Bermuda along the way.
These crossings generate repositioning cruises — one-way sailings between continents that feature lots of sea days, a handful of unusual port stops, and prices that make regular cruises look overpriced.
The main repositioning seasons:
- Spring (March–May): Caribbean → Europe. Ships move to the Mediterranean, Northern Europe, and the British Isles for summer season.
- Autumn (September–November): Europe → Caribbean. The reverse migration for winter season.
- Late September/October: Alaska → Hawaii, Panama Canal, or Asia. End of Alaska season.
- April/May: Panama Canal crossings. Ships moving between Pacific and Atlantic.
- Various: Asia repositioning, South America to Europe, Australia to Asia.
Why They're Cheap
Simple economics. The ship is crossing whether you're aboard or not. An empty cabin generates zero revenue. A cabin sold at half price generates revenue and fills the restaurants, bars, and casino with spending passengers.
Mainstream line repositioning deals regularly hit $40–$85 per person per night — for an ocean-crossing voyage that includes all meals, entertainment, a gym, pools, and accommodation.
To put that in perspective: a Holiday Inn in a mid-sized American city costs more per night. And the Holiday Inn doesn't cross an ocean or serve you lobster tail.
The Sea Day Question
Let's address the elephant in the ocean: repositioning cruises have a lot of sea days. A 14-night transatlantic might have 9–11 consecutive days without a port stop.
For some people, this is a dealbreaker. They need ports, excursions, new cities every morning. Fair enough — repositioning cruises aren't for them.
For others — and this is a larger group than you'd expect — consecutive sea days are the entire point. Here's why:
You actually use the ship. On a regular cruise, you're rushing off at every port. On a repositioning, you discover the ship's library, the spa's thermal suite, the quiet deck at the bow, the specialty restaurant at lunch, the afternoon tea service you'd normally skip. You use the thing you paid for.
The social dynamic shifts. With no ports to fragment the day, passengers settle into routines. You see the same people at trivia, at the bar, at the pool. Friendships form faster and deeper than on a port-intensive cruise.
You read books. Actual books. Cover to cover. When was the last time you did that?
The ocean becomes the attraction. Watching the Atlantic change colour across twelve days — steel grey, deep navy, pale green, impossible turquoise — is genuinely meditative. Sunrises and sunsets over open ocean, without a single reference point on the horizon, feel different from anything on land.
The Best Repositioning Routes
Transatlantic (The Classic)
When: March–May (westbound to eastbound) and September–November (eastbound to westbound).
Duration: 12–16 nights.
Route: Fort Lauderdale, Miami, or Tampa → Barcelona, Rome (Civitavecchia), Southampton, or Lisbon. Sometimes with stops in the Azores, Madeira, Bermuda, or the Canary Islands.
Why it's great: The quintessential repositioning. Long sea days, ocean crossing bragging rights, and arrival in Europe (or the Americas) by sea — the way people traveled for centuries.
Who does it: Almost every major cruise line. Royal Caribbean, Celebrity, Norwegian, Holland America, Princess, Cunard (the QM2 runs a scheduled transatlantic service, distinct from repositioning), MSC, and others.
Panama Canal
When: April–May and October–November.
Duration: 14–18 nights.
Route: Fort Lauderdale → San Francisco/Los Angeles (or reverse), transiting the Panama Canal with stops in Cartagena, Aruba, Costa Rica, or Mexico.
Why it's great: The canal transit itself is a bucket-list engineering marvel. Watching your enormous ship squeeze through locks with metres to spare on each side is unforgettable. Plus Caribbean and Pacific port stops.
Who does it: Holland America (a traditional Panama specialist), Princess, Celebrity, Norwegian.
Alaska → Hawaii / Pacific
When: Late September–October.
Duration: 10–14 nights.
Route: Vancouver or Seattle → Honolulu, sometimes via smaller Hawaiian islands.
Why it's great: 5–6 sea days crossing the Pacific, then arriving in Hawaii by ship. The contrast between the last Alaskan port and the first Hawaiian port is stunning.
Transpacific and Exotic Routes
When: Various, typically March–May and October–November.
Route: Asia → Australia, Australia → Asia, Mediterranean → Middle East, South America → Europe.
Duration: 14–25+ nights.
Why it's great: These are the deep cuts — long voyages with unusual port combinations that don't exist on regular itineraries. Singapore to Sydney via Bali and the Great Barrier Reef? That's a repositioning route.
The Practical Guide
Booking Tips
Book early for cabin selection, late for deals. Repositioning cruises are announced 12–18 months ahead. Early bookers get the best cabin locations. But unsold cabins drop significantly in price 60–90 days before sailing. If you're flexible on cabin type, waiting can pay off.
Check one-way flight costs first. The cruise is cheap, but you arrive in a different city from where you started. One-way international flights can be expensive. Factor this in before celebrating the fare.
Wave Season (January–March) offers the best repositioning deals when lines promote their upcoming spring crossings.
Consider shoulder season positioning. October transatlantic crossings can encounter rougher weather than April crossings. If seasickness is a concern, choose the calmer spring direction.
What to Pack
More than a regular cruise. You're aboard for two weeks with many sea days, so:
- Extra books, devices, and entertainment. Sea days are long.
- Layers. Transatlantic weather changes dramatically over 12 days. You might leave Florida in 30°C and arrive in England at 12°C.
- Sea sickness medication. Open ocean is less sheltered than coastal cruising. Even experienced cruisers can feel movement on transatlantic crossings.
- A watch or time zone tracker. Clocks change frequently — sometimes every night — as the ship crosses time zones. You'll gain (or lose) an hour regularly.
The repositioning cruise is cruising in its purest form: no rushing between ports, no 6 AM alarm for excursions, no feeling guilty about missing a destination. It's just you, the ship, the ocean, and the slow realisation that doing nothing is actually doing everything.
The One Downside Nobody Mentions
You will be very, very relaxed by the end. Dangerously relaxed. So relaxed that returning to normal life feels like re-entry from space. Budget an adjustment day at your destination before real life resumes.
Also, you'll want to do it again immediately. Repositioning cruises are habit-forming. Consider yourself warned.
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