---
title: "Cruises from Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Seattle and NYC in 2026: lines, itineraries, prices and what no one tells you"
excerpt: "In 2026-2027, the major North American and UK departure ports operate every line that matters: Carnival, Royal Caribbean, NCL, Princess, Disney, MSC, Holland America, Celebrity and Cunard. A 4-night inside cabin starts at USD 600 per couple — but with gratuities, port fees, drinks and shore excursions, the bill doubles. This guide decodes everything: itineraries, lines, hidden costs, documents and how to get to the terminal without paying a fortune in airport transfer."
description: "In 2026-2027, the major North American and UK departure ports operate every line that matters: Carnival, Royal Caribbean, NCL, Princess, Disney, MSC, Holland America, Celebrity and Cunard. A 4-night inside cabin starts at USD 600 per couple — but with gratuities, port fees, drinks and shore excursions, the bill doubles. This guide decodes everything: itineraries, lines, hidden costs, documents and how to get to the terminal without paying a fortune in airport transfer."
slug: "cruises-from-santos-2026-companies-itineraries-prices-brazilians"
locale: "en"
canonical: "https://voyspark.com/en/journal/cruises-from-santos-2026-companies-itineraries-prices-brazilians"
author: "Curadoria Voyspark"
published_at: "Thu May 07 2026 03:32:15 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
updated_at: "Wed Jun 03 2026 15:30:20 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
vertical: "destination"
reading_time_minutes: 22
word_count: 4480
hero_image: "https://s3.voyspark.com/voyspark-images/articles/cruzeiros-saindo-santos-2026-companhias-roteiros-precos-tudo-brasileiros/hero.jpg"
tags:
  - "cruzeiros"
  - "santos"
  - "msc"
  - "costa"
  - "companhias"
  - "brasileiros"
  - "2026"
---

# Cruises from Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Seattle and NYC in 2026: lines, itineraries, prices and what no one tells you

PortMiami was never supposed to remain the cruise capital of the world after Fort Lauderdale, Tampa and Port Canaveral built newer terminals. It did anyway. In 2026 PortMiami is forecast to clear 8.5 million revenue passengers, with Port Everglades close behind at 4 million. Add Seattle's Pier 91 (Alaska season), Brooklyn Cruise Terminal in Red Hook, Galveston, San Pedro near LA, Southampton in the UK, and Sydney's Overseas Passenger Terminal, and you have the cruise grid that prices the global market.

The post-2020 terminal overhauls finally made these ports worthy of the product. PortMiami's Terminal V (Virgin Voyages) opened in 2021, Terminal A (Royal Caribbean) in 2018, Terminal F (Carnival) is being expanded for 2026. Port Everglades opened Terminal 25 in 2023 for MSC. Southampton added the Horizon Cruise Terminal in 2021. Sydney still relies on the OPT and White Bay, but the integration with rail and ferries is excellent.

The result: cruise operators have concentrated firepower on these home ports. Carnival operates 27 ships from US ports in 2026-2027. Royal Caribbean operates 28. NCL 19. Disney 6. The volume keeps fares competitive for the savvy buyer — and ruinous for the lazy one.

---

### Why these ports dominate the cruise schedule

**TL;DR**: Geography. Miami and Fort Lauderdale sit closest to the Bahamas, Cozumel and Jamaica, the three most-booked Caribbean destinations. Seattle is the natural gateway to Alaska's Inside Passage. Southampton anchors all British and Northern European cruising. Sydney is the only home port within reasonable Australian flying range.

Geography. Miami and Fort Lauderdale sit closest to the Bahamas, Cozumel and Jamaica, the three most-booked Caribbean destinations. Seattle is the natural gateway to Alaska's Inside Passage. Southampton anchors all British and Northern European cruising. Sydney is the only home port within reasonable Australian flying range.

The second reason is structural. PortMiami can berth seven ships of any size simultaneously, including the Icon-class Royal Caribbean ships at 365 m. Port Everglades has nine deep-water cruise berths. Southampton handles the Queen Mary 2 (345 m) and the Iona. Sydney can only host two large ships at a time, which is why fares from Australia run higher.

The third reason is political. PortMiami invested USD 1 billion in expansion between 2017 and 2024, including a tunnel direct from I-395 to bypass downtown traffic. Port Everglades modernized terminals 2, 4 and 25. Southampton's Associated British Ports built dedicated cruise rail platforms.

The result: international lines chose these ports as flagship home ports. Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas (largest cruise ship in the world) is based year-round at PortMiami. Carnival's flagship Mardi Gras sails out of Port Canaveral. NCL Prima sails Caribbean from PortMiami. Cunard's Queen Mary 2 makes Southampton its only home port.

---

### Lines and ships on the 2026-2027 schedule

**TL;DR**: Royal Caribbean dominates US cruising. For 2026-2027 they confirmed: Icon of the Seas — 365 m, 7,600 guests, world's largest cruise ship, year-round Miami. Wonder, Symphony, Harmony, Allure of the Seas — Oasis-class, 5,400 guests. NCL operates Prima, Encore and Joy from Miami and NYC. Carnival runs Mardi Gras and Celebration from Canaveral and Miami.

**Royal Caribbean** dominates the US market. For 2026-2027 confirmed:

- **Icon of the Seas** — 365 m, 7,600 guests, world's largest cruise ship. Year-round Caribbean from PortMiami.
- **Wonder, Symphony, Harmony, Allure of the Seas** — Oasis-class, 5,400 guests. Miami, Port Canaveral and Cape Liberty.
- **Anthem of the Seas** — Quantum-class, 4,180 guests. Cape Liberty (NYC).
- **Ovation of the Seas** — Quantum-class. Seattle for Alaska season.

**Carnival Cruise Line** operates:

- **Mardi Gras** — 5,200 guests, LNG-powered. Port Canaveral.
- **Celebration** — sister to Mardi Gras. PortMiami.
- **Carnival Jubilee** — newest of the class. Galveston, year-round Western Caribbean.

**Norwegian Cruise Line** operates with:

- **Norwegian Prima** — 142,500 GT, 3,100 guests. PortMiami and NYC.
- **Norwegian Encore, Joy, Bliss** — Breakaway-Plus class, 4,000 guests.

**Princess Cruises** runs the **Sun Princess** and **Star Princess** (newest in fleet, 4,300 guests) on Caribbean and Mediterranean rotations. Princess attracts a more mature crowd and prices balcony cabins competitively.

**Disney Cruise Line** runs **Disney Wish, Disney Treasure** (newest, 2024), and the older **Disney Fantasy, Dream, Magic, Wonder** out of Port Canaveral, Fort Lauderdale and Galveston. 3-7 night Bahamas itineraries with Castaway Cay and Lookout Cay.

**Cunard Line** sails the **Queen Mary 2** transatlantic Southampton-NYC, **Queen Anne** (2024) on world cruises, **Queen Elizabeth** and **Queen Victoria** on Mediterranean and Northern European routes.

---

### When is each cruise season

**TL;DR**: Caribbean year-round, with peak December-April. Alaska May-September. Mediterranean April-November, peak July-August. Northern Europe May-September. Repositioning cruises in April-May and October-November.

Caribbean runs **year-round** with peak from late November through April (snowbird season). Alaska is May to September only. Mediterranean April-November. Northern Europe (Norwegian fjords, Baltic, Iceland) May-September.

| Region | Peak | Shoulder | Off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Caribbean | Dec-Apr | May, Nov | Sep-Oct (hurricane) |
| Alaska | Jun-Aug | May, Sep | — |
| Mediterranean | Jul-Aug | Apr-May, Sep-Oct | Nov |
| Northern Europe | Jun-Aug | May, Sep | — |
| Transatlantic | Apr-May, Oct-Nov | — | — |

The sweet spot for Caribbean value is **late April or early May** — winter is over up north, hurricane season hasn't started, prices are 30-40% off January peak.

---

### Typical itineraries from US, UK and Australian ports

**TL;DR**: 4-5 nights — Western Caribbean (Cozumel, Costa Maya) on Carnival from Miami/Galveston. The most-booked short trip. Couple inside cabin: USD 800-1,500. 7 nights — Eastern Caribbean (St. Thomas, St. Maarten, Bahamas) on Royal Caribbean. 7 nights — Alaska Inside Passage from Seattle. 10-14 nights — Mediterranean from Southampton.

**4-5 nights — Western Caribbean (Cozumel + Costa Maya)** on Carnival or Royal Caribbean. The most-booked short trip. Departs Thursday or Friday evening, returns Monday or Tuesday morning. Couple inside cabin: USD 800-1,500.

**7 nights — Eastern Caribbean (St. Thomas + St. Maarten + Bahamas)** on Royal Caribbean or NCL from PortMiami. Couple inside cabin: USD 1,400-2,800. Three Caribbean stops without changing hotels.

**7 nights — Alaska Inside Passage (Juneau + Skagway + Ketchikan + Glacier Bay)** from Seattle on Princess, Royal Caribbean or NCL. USD 1,600-3,500 couple inside. May to September only. Best value in May or September.

**10-14 nights — Mediterranean (Barcelona + Marseille + Genoa + Rome + Naples)** from Southampton on Cunard, or roundtrip from Barcelona on Royal Caribbean. USD 2,400-5,800 couple inside.

**Transatlantic Southampton → New York (April or October)**. 7 nights on Queen Mary 2, no port calls. USD 2,500-6,000 per person inside; USD 4,500-12,000 with balcony. The Cunard classic.

**Repositioning Southampton → Miami (October-November)**. 14-16 nights, usually Southampton → Lisbon → Madeira or Canaries → Caribbean → Miami. USD 2,500-4,200 per person inside.

---

### Real 2026 prices: the full bill

**TL;DR**: Advertising shows "from USD 199 per person". That's the inside cabin price on a bad date, double occupancy, with nothing included. The real bill works like this.

Advertising shows "from USD 199 per person". That's the inside cabin price on a bad date, double occupancy, with nothing included. The real bill works like this:

| Item | 4 nights (couple) | 7 nights (couple) | 11 nights (couple) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inside cabin | USD 800-1,500 | USD 1,400-2,800 | USD 2,400-4,800 |
| Balcony cabin | USD 1,200-2,200 | USD 2,200-4,200 | USD 3,800-7,500 |
| Suite | USD 3,500+ | USD 6,000+ | USD 10,000+ |
| Port fees & taxes | USD 150-250 | USD 250-400 | USD 450-700 |
| Mandatory gratuities | USD 16-20/day/person | USD 16-20/day/person | USD 16-20/day/person |
| Drink package | USD 65-85/day/person | USD 65-85/day/person | USD 65-85/day/person |
| Basic Wi-Fi | USD 15-25/day | USD 15-25/day | USD 15-25/day |
| Shore excursions | USD 80-250/port/person | — | — |

**Inside cabin 4 nights couple actual, with gratuities and taxes, no drink package or excursions:** USD 1,060-1,910.
**Inside cabin 7 nights couple complete, with drink package and Wi-Fi:** USD 2,800-4,800.
**Balcony 11 nights couple complete, with drinks, Wi-Fi and 4 excursions:** USD 6,500-11,500.

Compare to 7 nights at an all-inclusive resort in the Mayan Riviera: USD 1,800-3,500 per couple. A cruise pays off when the point is **visiting multiple destinations**, not relaxing in one place.

---

### The fees nobody explains clearly

**TL;DR**: Mandatory gratuities (lines call them "service charges"). Charged automatically at the end of the cruise. Carnival, Royal Caribbean, NCL: USD 16-20/day adult, USD 8-10/day child. Difficult to remove — you have to visit the guest services desk and argue a specific problem.

**Mandatory gratuities** ("service charges"). Charged automatically at the end of the cruise. Carnival, Royal Caribbean and NCL all charge USD 16-20/day adult, USD 8-10/day child. It's practically impossible to remove — you have to go to guest services, claim a specific problem, and even then they only partially remove.

**Port fees and government taxes.** Vary by itinerary. Western Caribbean adds Mexican port fees and Cozumel tourism tax. Eastern Caribbean adds St. Maarten and BVI fees. Alaska adds Canadian taxes on cruises that touch Victoria or Vancouver. Total: USD 150 (4 nights) to USD 700 (11 nights Mediterranean).

**Drink packages.** The catch: there's a soft package (soda + juice), a beer/wine package, and an ultimate package (cocktails, premium liquor, champagne). Ultimate is the most-sold. Costs USD 65-85/day. Do the math: if you drink 4 beers and 2 cocktails per day, it pays. One beer and one glass of wine — it doesn't.

**Wi-Fi.** Most lines now run Starlink (Royal Caribbean, MSC, NCL). It works reasonably well. Expensive: USD 15-25/day basic, USD 30-50/day streaming. On Caribbean itineraries, your US carrier roams in Mexico and most Caribbean islands — buy Wi-Fi only for sea days.

**Shore excursions.** Sold onboard at 30-50% markup over local operators. In Cozumel, a snorkel-and-ruins tour costs USD 65 direct from a local guide; onboard it's USD 110. Book ahead via Viator, GetYourGuide or Shore Excursions Group and save USD 30-150 per person.

---

### Where to stay before or after: hotels near the cruise terminals

**TL;DR**: Most passengers fly in the day they board. For those coming from far (West Coast, Europe, Asia, Australia), spending a night near the port makes sense. Miami: Brickell, Downtown or Miami Beach. Fort Lauderdale: Las Olas or Beach. Seattle: Belltown or near Pier 91. NYC: Lower Manhattan or Brooklyn Heights. Southampton: Westquay or Ocean Village.

Most passengers fly in the day they board. But for those coming from far (West Coast, Europe, Asia, Australia), a flight that arrives in the evening plus airport traffic to the port does not combine with a cruise that sails at 4 PM.

Best neighborhoods to stay near major ports:

- **PortMiami:** Brickell (financial district, 5 min to terminal, hotels USD 220-450); Miami Beach (10-15 min Uber to port, hotels USD 250-500); Downtown Miami (closest to terminal, USD 180-380).
- **Port Everglades (Fort Lauderdale):** Las Olas Boulevard area (USD 200-400); Beach (USD 250-500); Hollywood Beach (cheaper, USD 150-300, 20 min to port).
- **Pier 91 Seattle:** Belltown (USD 220-400); Queen Anne (closest neighborhood, USD 240-450); downtown (USD 280-500).
- **Brooklyn Cruise Terminal:** Brooklyn Heights (USD 280-500); Lower Manhattan (USD 320-600); Cobble Hill (USD 240-400).
- **Southampton:** Westquay (closest to port, GBP 120-240); Ocean Village marina (GBP 140-280); city centre (GBP 100-220).

Avoid staying too far from the terminal. Save the time and money on transfer for the cruise itself.

---

### How to get to the cruise terminal without overpaying

**TL;DR**: Don't take a yellow taxi from MIA airport (USD 40-60). Use Uber/Lyft (USD 25-40) or the new Brightline rail extension from MIA to MiamiCentral (USD 15) + free port shuttle. Brightline also connects FLL to downtown Fort Lauderdale. Seattle: light rail SeaTac to downtown then taxi to Pier 91 (USD 25 total). NYC: subway 1 train to South Ferry, then taxi.

Realistic options:

- **PortMiami from MIA airport:** Uber/Lyft USD 25-40, 20 minutes off-peak. Brightline rail MIA → MiamiCentral USD 15 + USD 10 taxi to port. Avoid yellow cab flat USD 38.
- **Port Everglades from FLL airport:** Uber/Lyft USD 15-25, 10 minutes. Or Brightline FLL → Fort Lauderdale station + USD 10 Uber.
- **Pier 91 Seattle from SEA airport:** Link light rail SEA → Westlake Center USD 3.25 + USD 18 Uber to Pier 91 (35 min total). Or Uber direct USD 50-70.
- **Brooklyn Cruise Terminal from JFK/LGA:** JFK USD 65 Uber, 50 min. LGA USD 55 Uber, 45 min. Subway is impractical with luggage.
- **Cape Liberty from JFK/EWR:** EWR is closest, USD 30 Uber, 20 min. JFK USD 80 Uber, 1h.
- **Southampton from LHR airport:** National Express coach GBP 25 (2.5h) or SouthWestern train GBP 45 (1h30, change at Reading). Taxi GBP 110.
- **Your own car:** Port parking USD 25-30/day at PortMiami. On a 7-night cruise that's USD 175-210. Pays off only for groups of 3+ from nearby.

---

### All-inclusive: what's in and what's out

**TL;DR**: Included: all meals at the buffet and main dining rooms, coffee, tea, iced juice, water at meals, nightly theater shows, pools, hot tubs, basic gym, kids club, cocktail reception with the captain (one formal night). NOT included: alcoholic drinks, sodas, specialty restaurants, spa, Wi-Fi, shore excursions, special activities, professional photos, laundry.

**What's included in the cabin price:**

- All meals at the main buffet and main dining rooms.
- Coffee, tea, iced juice, water at meals.
- Nightly theater shows.
- Pools, hot tubs, basic gym.
- Kids club by age group (3-6, 7-12, 13-17 on Royal Caribbean; similar on others).
- Captain's formal night (one per cruise).
- Casino (you play and lose your money on your own).

**What's NOT included:**

- Alcoholic drinks and sodas (unless you bought a package).
- Specialty restaurants (steakhouse, Italian premium, sushi) — cover charge USD 30-65 per person per meal.
- Spa, massages, salon.
- Wi-Fi (separate package).
- Shore excursions.
- Special activities: go-karts on deck (NCL), zipline, simulator.
- Professional photos (sold for USD 20-50 per photo).
- Laundry (USD 25-40 per bag).
- Duty-free shopping onboard.

The rule to not blow the budget: treat the cabin price as **40-60% of what you'll actually spend**.

---

### Kids, family and Disney

**TL;DR**: Cruising with kids works better than flying with kids. Structured kids club by age, pool, food available 20h/day, parents can have an adult dinner while the child is in supervised activity. Royal Caribbean Adventure Ocean ages 3-17. Carnival Camp Ocean. Disney is its own category.

Cruising with kids works better than flying with kids. Structured kids club by age, pool, food available 20h/day, and parents get an adult dinner while the kids are in supervised activity.

**Royal Caribbean** splits Adventure Ocean by age: Aquanauts (3-5), Explorers (6-8), Voyagers (9-11), Teens (12-17). Free.

**Carnival Camp Ocean** is structured similarly: Penguins (2-5), Stingrays (6-8), Sharks (9-11). Free.

**NCL Splash Academy and Entourage**: ages 3-17, free.

**Disney Cruise Line** is its own category. There's no "kids free". Full fare for all. Family cabin for 4 in Concierge runs USD 7,000-15,000 for a 7-night sailing — expensive, but the product is unique: character clubs, themed dinner rotations, no drunk-adult vibe on the ship, Disney-grade service.

**Disney pays off if:** kids are 5-11 and Disney fans, family will use all themed dinners, you do it once in a lifetime. **Doesn't pay if:** kids are 12+, family has a limited budget, or adults wanted to relax (Disney has no adult party).

---

### Honeymoon at sea

**TL;DR**: Cruise has become a popular honeymoon over the last 5 years. Cruise lines sold it well: a romance package costs USD 200-400 per cabin and includes welcome champagne, private dinner on deck, couples spa treatment, cabin decoration and pro photos.

Cruise has become a popular honeymoon over the last 5 years. The lines sold it well: a romance package costs USD 200-400 per cabin and includes:

- Welcome champagne in the suite.
- Private dinner on deck or at a specialty restaurant.
- Couples spa treatment.
- Cabin decoration (flowers, petals, king bed).
- Professional couples photo.

The ideal cabin is a **suite with a balcony**. On Royal Caribbean Symphony or Princess Sun, a suite costs USD 4,000-7,000 for 7 nights — expensive but it includes a premium drink package, Wi-Fi and priority boarding.

Most-booked itinerary: 7 nights Eastern Caribbean or transatlantic Southampton → Caribbean (honeymoon + big trip in one package).

---

### Cruise vs beach resort: when each makes sense

**TL;DR**: A cruise pays off when you want to visit 3-5 destinations without changing hotels, or travel with a big family. A beach resort (Cancún, Bahamas Atlantis, Hawaii) pays off when the goal is to relax in one place.

**A cruise pays off when:**

- You want to visit 3-5 destinations without changing hotels.
- Big family trip (3-4 generations) and you need the kids club.
- Childless couple with short time (4-7 nights) and no patience for logistics.
- Honeymoon without driving.

**A beach resort (Cancún, Bahamas, Hawaii, Maui all-inclusive) pays off when:**

- The point is to **rest in one place**, not visit destinations.
- You want beach 12h/day, not 4-6h per port.
- Trip is longer than 7 days (long cruises get repetitive).
- You want a routine (wake, coffee, beach, lunch, nap, beach, dinner).

The worst decision is to take a cruise for the cheap price thinking you'll rest. Cruise is active travel, not rest travel. You wake early for port, do an excursion, return late, dine late, sleep late. Seven nights of that rhythm wears you out more than air travel.

---

### Documents by cruise type

**TL;DR**: Closed-loop Caribbean cruise (Miami → Bahamas → back to Miami): US citizens can use a passport card or birth certificate + government photo ID. Open-loop or international cruises (Europe, Asia, South America): passport required with 6 months validity after return date.

**Closed-loop Caribbean cruise (departs and returns to the same US port):**

- Adult US citizen: passport card OR original birth certificate + government photo ID (driver's license).
- Minor: birth certificate or passport. Minor traveling without both parents needs notarized authorization.
- Passport recommended even if not required, in case of medical evacuation from a port.

**Open-loop or international cruise (Europe, Asia, South America, Hawaii from California to Vancouver):**

- Passport with minimum 6 months validity after return date.
- ETIAS for Schengen Europe starting 2026 (USD 9, valid 3 years).
- Argentina, Chile, Brazil: passport. Some need a tourist card.
- Caribbean from the UK: passport. UK citizens visit BVI without visa.
- Yellow fever vaccination: required for itineraries that touch West Africa, parts of South America. Taken with **minimum 10 days notice**. International Certificate of Vaccination.

Lines verify documents at boarding. Without valid documents, you don't board and lose the cruise (no refund).

---

### How to actually save money

**TL;DR**: Book early (9 months) or last-minute (30 days). Take a repositioning cruise. Inside cabin on short Caribbean. Book shore excursions outside. Drink package only if you drink heavily. Wi-Fi by day, not full package. Avoid Christmas/New Year and Easter.

1. **Book early or last-minute.** 9 months out is when the best cabin promotions drop. 30 days out is when the "last minute" sales come to fill the ship. Between 30 and 180 days is the worst time.
2. **Take a repositioning cruise.** In April/May and October/November, ships move between hemispheres. These cruises are long (15-20 nights), expensive in absolute terms, cheap per night.
3. **Inside cabin on most Caribbean itineraries.** You only sleep there.
4. **Book shore excursions outside.** Viator, GetYourGuide, ShoreExcursionsGroup, TripAdvisor Experiences.
5. **Drink package only if you drink heavily.** Otherwise pay per drink.
6. **Wi-Fi by day, not full package.** Caribbean itineraries have your US carrier roaming.
7. **Board at a secondary port.** NCL offers boarding in Tampa or Galveston on some itineraries — saves USD 200 per couple.
8. **Don't buy professional photos.** USD 30 each and they sit in the cabin.
9. **Enjoy the formal night.** It's the one night worth paying for the specialty restaurant (comes with champagne).
10. **Avoid Christmas/New Year and Easter.** Prices jump 40-60%.

---

### Practical appendix

**TL;DR**: Useful sites for booking: CruiseDirect, Cruise Critic, the official Royal Caribbean, Carnival, NCL, Princess and Disney sites. Documents to keep: cruise e-ticket, travel insurance, prepaid excursion receipts, PDF passport copy on phone.

**Useful sites for booking:**

- **Costco Travel, AAA Travel** — official agencies with frequent national promotions and bonus onboard credit.
- **Royal Caribbean, Carnival, NCL, Disney (official sites)** — "kids sail free" campaigns and "early booking" promotions.
- **CruiseDirect, Cruise Critic** — honest comparisons with real passenger reviews.
- **Viator, GetYourGuide, ShoreExcursionsGroup** — pre-booked shore excursions.

**Documents to keep:**

- Cruise e-ticket.
- Travel insurance proof (recommended for all, mandatory for international).
- Prepaid excursion receipts.
- PDF copy of passport on phone.

**PortMiami (Cruise Capital):**

- Address: 1015 N America Way, Miami, FL 33132.
- Phone: +1 305-347-4800.
- Parking: USD 25-30/day.
- Boarding starts: 11 AM. Sailing: 4 PM-6 PM (varies).
