Princess Cruises has
Black Friday Sale Offers For 2022-2023: Choose from
60 sailings under $60 per day (per guest), and
100's more sailings under $100 per day (per guest)
to Alaska, the California Coast, the Caribbean, Panama Canal and Europe. Book through
Travelocity,
Expedia,
Kayak,
AAA Travel, or Costco Travel
Thanks to Deal Hunter
serra for finding this deal.
Note, additionally, this offer stacks with $1 deposits, meaning those who reserve their sailings to worldwide destinations by Nov. 30 don't have to pay the remaining balance until 90 days before their trip, when deposits typically range between $100 - $800 at the time of booking. The $1 deposit does NOT apply to sailings within 90 days of November 30th.
Sample itineraries available in the 60 sailings under $60 per day include:
- 7-Day Mexican Riviera on Discovery Princess, our newest ship (March 4, 2023)
- 10-Day Panama Canal with Costa Rica & Caribbean on Caribbean Princess (March 12, 2023)
- 14-Day Moroccan Passage on Sky Princess (March 18, 2023)
- 7-Day Western Caribbean with Mexico on Ruby Princess (March 19, 2023)
- 5-Day Pacific Coastal on Majestic Princess (April 30, 2023)
Sample itineraries available in the 100's of sailings under $100 per day include:
- 18-Day Panama Canal – Ocean to Ocean on Emerald Princess (April 16, 2023)
- 7-Day Alaska Voyage of the Glaciers on Majestic Princess (May 13, 2023)
- 7-Day Alaska Inside Passage on Royal Princess (May 13, 2023)
- 12-Day British Isles with Portland (for Stonehenge) on Regal Princess (May 20, 2023)
- 7-Day Canada & New England on Emerald Princess (Sept. 9, 2023)
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82 Comments
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A lot of cruise promotions are smoke and mirrors as they adjust the rate before making the promotions.
I will say WiFi on board cruises has gotten infinitely better over the last couple years. It sucker just 3-4 years ago. Royal Caribbean has the best I have ever seen though…it's as good as being in your living room with no dropouts (except during peak times…it does slow way down then.)
Obviously the rooms are tiny. But if you select 4 people (2 adults, 2 kids) on an inside room where they offer 1 bed how does that work generally? I see some of the large suites offer a bed and a pull out couch so that makes more sense.
Hotels just wont show/book a 2 person room for 4 and I would assume cruises wouldn't either but I'm struggling to see how this works.
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Obviously the rooms are tiny. But if you select 4 people (2 adults, 2 kids) on an inside room where they offer 1 bed how does that work generally? I see some of the large suites offer a bed and a pull out couch so that makes more sense.
Hotels just wont show/book a 2 person room for 4 and I would assume cruises wouldn't either but I'm struggling to see how this works.
Obviously the rooms are tiny. But if you select 4 people (2 adults, 2 kids) on an inside room where they offer 1 bed how does that work generally? I see some of the large suites offer a bed and a pull out couch so that makes more sense.
Hotels just wont show/book a 2 person room for 4 and I would assume cruises wouldn't either but I'm struggling to see how this works.
For balcony and 4 people, you'll get a sofa that turns into a bed or some even turn into bunk beds. Not quite the "pullout" like at home. Once again your room steward sets them up in the evening and then back into a soft in the morning.
Obviously the rooms are tiny. But if you select 4 people (2 adults, 2 kids) on an inside room where they offer 1 bed how does that work generally? I see some of the large suites offer a bed and a pull out couch so that makes more sense.
Hotels just wont show/book a 2 person room for 4 and I would assume cruises wouldn't either but I'm struggling to see how this works.
- For a family of 4, I would strongly suggest you get a balcony room or at least an oceanview room. You will feel very cooped up in an inside room. Most of the time the cost difference is not a lot between balcony, oceanview, and inside rooms. You can also save money with the "obstructed balcony room".
- Look into different accommodation options. For example, I am a family of 4 with two adult daughters. In my most recent cruise in October, I ended up booking 3 rooms for 4 passengers. My wife and I took a balcony room, and each of my daughters get their own inside staterooms. The total cost is about the same for my family of 4 staying in one balcony room where as we booked 2 additional inside rooms for my daughters. The cost difference between single versus double occupancy for inside room was less than $100 per room. In the meantime, we received $100 onboard credit for each of my daughters' rooms. The bottom line is it cost about the same for booking one balcony room for 4 passengers versus 3 separate rooms for 4 passengers as I mentioned above.
- Each adult may need to pair up with one kid if your children are under age and you want to book separate rooms. They don't care if you switch passengers in your rooms once you are onboard. Make sure you book adjacent rooms or in the close proximity.
- If you are prone to sea sickness, try to book room close to the center of the ship. The ideal room is deck 6 mid-ship. Avoid too high or too low and too far in the front.
Try out with a 5 to 7 days cruise if this is your first time. You would not have a good cruise experience if it is too short (I hate boarding and disembarkation).
You can google different website for stateroom condition. Here's one of the website you can check: https://www.icruise.com/cabins/pr...-E310.html
Have fun!
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