thickerson555 Posted June 2, 2018 #1 Share Posted June 2, 2018 When I go to book a cruise on Royal there are times when the website says there are no cabins for 3 people? If you call to book will that make a difference? Is it because they are already at maximum occupancy? It seems like most rooms sleep 3 to 4 people so I don't understand why there are no cabins. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Melrosgirl Posted June 2, 2018 #2 Share Posted June 2, 2018 Which ship? Many couches in many rooms on newer ships are not sofa beds. When I go to book a cruise on Royal there are times when the website says there are no cabins for 3 people? If you call to book will that make a difference? Is it because they are already at maximum occupancy? It seems like most rooms sleep 3 to 4 people so I don't understand why there are no cabins. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SbbquilterUT Posted June 2, 2018 #3 Share Posted June 2, 2018 I believe a call to Royal Caribbean will help you more - they have access to other inventory than you see on the site. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chengkp75 Posted June 2, 2018 #4 Share Posted June 2, 2018 There are many more "berths" (beds, pull-out couches, pullmans) than the ship is allowed to have passengers, as the ship is limited by lifeboat capacity. The reason there are more berths than capacity is to be able for those wishing to book 3/4 in a cabin to have flexibility in choosing a cabin category. If you look at the "maximum capacity" of a ship, compared to the "nominal capacity" (all cabins at double occupancy), the maximum is not twice the nominal (which it would be if all cabins that could hold 3/4 were able to be sold at 3/4 capacity). There is about 25% (varies with ship and lifeboats) above double occupancy to maximum capacity. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thickerson555 Posted June 2, 2018 Author #5 Share Posted June 2, 2018 I was looking at the symphony of the seas. One sailing date had 3 person cabins, but the other did not. I wanted to start in Rome, and of course that one doesn't have any 3 person rooms. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chengkp75 Posted June 2, 2018 #6 Share Posted June 2, 2018 I was looking at the symphony of the seas. One sailing date had 3 person cabins, but the other did not. I wanted to start in Rome, and of course that one doesn't have any 3 person rooms. Interporting (when a cruise has more than one embarkation port) is another set of circumstances. A fixed number of actual cabins (not just a number of cabins) are set aside for each embarkation, so this splits the number of available 3/4 cabins. Also, this makes the logistics of matching maximum capacity even more difficult, as they have to look at essentially two cruises on one ship. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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