Rare Ready2go11 Posted August 22 #1 Share Posted August 22 In looking at the 2026 spring and fall TA cruise schedules, most (but not all) have fewer port stops than before. Oosterdam looks like the hardest hit although NS is also impacted. Any idea why this change was made? I love lazy sea days but there are already plenty of them on a TA and I like the ports along the northern and southern routes. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
koolforkatz Posted August 22 #2 Share Posted August 22 I have noticed this is a recent trend with other cruise lines as well. Fewer ports on TA's. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shadow 123 Posted August 23 #3 Share Posted August 23 (edited) 2 hours ago, koolforkatz said: I have noticed this is a recent trend with other cruise lines as well. Fewer ports on TA's. I was looking at Cunard today transatlantic and it's the same thing. In 16-18 day cruises there are probably about 4 ports. Edited August 23 by shadow 123 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KAKcruiser Posted August 23 #4 Share Posted August 23 I have been complaining for a few years that the Caribbean cruises have reduced number of ports especially the Rotterdam 9 day and 12 day itineraries. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indianadaytripper Posted August 23 #5 Share Posted August 23 Most ports are being overwhelmed by cruise ships, expect less port calls in the future. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Mary229 Posted August 23 #6 Share Posted August 23 (edited) We are noticing the same thing. Some long cruises are over 50% sea days, I will vote no with my wallet to that. I cruise to go places and have no interest in being in a civilian navy one reason may be the larger ships but there is no reason it becomes acceptable for me Edited August 23 by Mary229 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare foodsvcmgr Posted August 23 #7 Share Posted August 23 Less ports in a cruise of similar duration = reduced speeds = fuel savings. It’s cost driven I suspect. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sir PMP Posted August 23 #8 Share Posted August 23 Bigger ships, bigger disappointments. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wdw1972 Posted August 23 #9 Share Posted August 23 9 hours ago, KAKcruiser said: I have been complaining for a few years that the Caribbean cruises have reduced number of ports especially the Rotterdam 9 day and 12 day itineraries. This is one of the things that appeals to me - I'd rather be at sea, enjoying my cabana in the Retreat, vs wandering around a Caribbean port (been there, done that). My priorities shifted from ports to shipboard life a long time ago, at least in the Caribbean. Cruising somewhere new to me, my priorities would be different 😉 Sue/WDW1972 10 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Gail & Marty sailing away Posted August 23 #10 Share Posted August 23 1 hour ago, wdw1972 said: This is one of the things that appeals to me - I'd rather be at sea, enjoying my cabana in the Retreat, vs wandering around a Caribbean port (been there, done that). My priorities shifted from ports to shipboard life a long time ago, at least in the Caribbean. Cruising somewhere new to me, my priorities would be different 😉 Sue/WDW1972 I agree with you, why stop at a Caribbean port. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare albingirl Posted August 23 #11 Share Posted August 23 For us, a transatlantic is a very big deal. The ports are an integral part of the experience. There is a certain thrill associated with visiting places we've never seen before. Heck, if I want to sit by a pool, I can stay home. These cruises aren't cheap, not by a long shot, and we are interested in seeing as much of the world as we can. We have such fond memories of many of those places we've been, and hope to go further with the exploration. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Mary229 Posted August 23 #12 Share Posted August 23 I understand those not wanting to wander around a Caribbean port but there are so many other places they could stop instead. I do have a rather disappointing transatlantic cruise coming up, wishing it would stop in the Azores rather than the Caribbean but it fits my schedule. If they were to remove those two ports and get me home earlier that would be fine but then they couldn’t charge me for 14 days, right😬. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare cbr663 Posted August 23 #13 Share Posted August 23 16 hours ago, KAKcruiser said: I have been complaining for a few years that the Caribbean cruises have reduced number of ports especially the Rotterdam 9 day and 12 day itineraries. We've been noticing that also for some time. HAL used to have a competitive advantage with its itineraries but that seems to have been disregarded by HAL. A nine day cruise with only 4 port days basically means the ship is the destination. More sea days means more onboard spending and as others have mentioned, lower fuel costs as the ships can sail at a much lower speed. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
2LoveBikes Posted August 24 #14 Share Posted August 24 There are some travel blogs talking about many ports in the North Atlantic, Spain, Italy and other places who are boycotting cruise ship visits to their cities. They claim they just don't want the influx of people landing on their shores affecting their quality of life and not spending enough money there. Check one of the blog-Gary Baimbridge “Tips for Travelers” 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kirkc Posted August 24 #15 Share Posted August 24 Not to sound like a snob, but after many years cruising the Caribbean we have been to almost all of the ports. Prefer staying onboard and enjoying an empty ship, a cabana and the excellent service received. Never left the ship during port calls on the last two trips. For us, the ship is the destination. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare BermudaBound2014 Posted August 24 #16 Share Posted August 24 I suspect this is a business decision by the bean counters. Captive audience. I predict a day in the not too distant future where Caribbean itineraries only stop at private islands and perhaps one of the mega ports (example; Nassau/St. Thomas/Cozumel). Fuel cost greatly reduced if they just sail from Florida to the Bahamas and CCL has two private islands now in Half Moon Cay (which is getting a pier) and Celebration Key. MSC is even overnighting at their private island with a bonfire and carnival type party in the evening after sunset and Royal Caribbeans private island boasts the largest pool in the Bahamas. It's coming. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare FlaMariner Posted August 24 #17 Share Posted August 24 On 8/22/2024 at 7:55 PM, Ready2go11 said: In looking at the 2026 spring and fall TA cruise schedules, most (but not all) have fewer port stops than before. I noticed that also...... I guess they have figure out that if folks are choosing a TA, they are fine with/enjoy sea days.... We go on many TA's and have two booked next year.....We like them because: we go to a few ports along the way (few is fine) we enjoy sea days we are glad we are not flying the price per day is a deal we arrive either home/Europe rested and ready to hit the ground running I'm fine with fewer ports on a TA...just keep changing up the offering....We've seen Port Delgado switched out for Bermuda, the shuffle of Gibraltar mixed in with the Spanish ports and different ports switched out in southern England. It seems each TA has some minor port changes so that keeps us happy...wether 3, 4 or 5 ports we are fine w/that on a TA....If we wanted more ports, we would not choose a TA in the first place. We missed Port Delgado twice over the years...and it made for 9 days at sea....not a problem. This past April, we did the Oosterdam TA to Barcelona and then the next cruise which was 10 ports in 11 days. LOL. We are glad we had the TA prior to being "off to the races". Enjoy the TA's......no matter the port stops! 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Mary229 Posted August 24 #18 Share Posted August 24 @FlaMariner for me I would be happy to do a crossing in 7 days as a replacement for air travel. But if I am going to pay for a 14 day TA I would like a little variety and a few stops outside of the Caribbean. I agree though, sailing is better than flying. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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