which (again) brings a clear solution for a cruise lines - make a one (total) amount (not a cruise fair, port charges, taxes, gratuities, drink package, refundable deposit fee ...). And then (similar to Regent or Oceania) display items (with prices) that might be credited (for example, if you don't want a drink package, it would a discount from that total cruise price). So, you see an all-inclusive price and make your decision whether you want it or not. At the same time if all cruise lines do it this way, one can make a true comparison between multiple cruise lines (or even within the same cruise line between different ships, sail dates, and so on) prorated per day (that's what I always try to accomplish, anyhow, but first, I have to add those numbers, for Celebrity, for example, and then divide by a number of sailing days and then compare with Regent price also divided by their itinerary's number of sailing days). I just looked at 10-day March 2026 Celebrity Ascent Caribbean, Retreat Magic Carpet Sky Suite, and as you know, I had to add all those number (refundable deposit fee, drink package/wi-fi, tax) and came up with $620 pp per day. For a similar price, it's so much better to get Regent's (or Seabourn or Silversea) even the least expensive cabin type (I saw one number (price) and divided by 10 - that's it).