How Much Is a Cruise per Night? Pricing, Inclusions, and Saving Strategies
The cruise media from VELTRA, the agency offering local experience tours in over 150 countries. Built on staff sailing reports and thousands of yearly bookings, we make first-time cruise selection clearer through cruise line comparisons, port guides, and fare breakdowns.
What you’ll learn
Reading time: approx. 10 min
- Per-night cost ranges for inside, oceanview, balcony, and suite cabins
- What's in the cruise fare and what's billed separately
- How line, itinerary, season, and booking timing affect pricing
- Realistic total-cost example for a 7-night cruise
- Ten savings tactics: early booking, off-season, beverage packages, and more
"Cruises sound expensive." "What's the per-night cost?" These are normal first questions. Real cruise pricing varies a lot by cabin type, line, itinerary, and season — there isn't a single number.
That said, knowing the ranges makes budgeting easier and helps you spot the right cruise for your budget. And once you factor in everything that's included in the fare, the value-per-night often comes out better than people expect.
Per-Night Cost by Cabin Type
Cabin type drives the per-night price most.
Inside cabin
Profile: No window. Most affordable.
Per night: about ¥10,000–20,000
Examples:
- 3-night cruise: ¥30,000–60,000 per person
- 7-night cruise: ¥70,000–140,000 per person
Oceanview cabin
Profile: Has a window. Ocean view.
Per night: about ¥20,000–30,000
Examples:
- 3-night cruise: ¥60,000–90,000 per person
- 7-night cruise: ¥140,000–210,000 per person
Balcony cabin
Profile: Private balcony. Most popular category.
Per night: about ¥30,000–50,000
Examples:
- 3-night cruise: ¥90,000–150,000 per person
- 7-night cruise: ¥210,000–350,000 per person
Suite
Profile: Largest, most luxurious. Concierge and other elevated services.
Per night: about ¥50,000–100,000+
Examples:
- 3-night cruise: ¥150,000–300,000+ per person
- 7-night cruise: ¥350,000–700,000+ per person
Note: Real numbers swing with line, itinerary, and timing.
What's in the Fare and What's Not
To compare cruise value to other trips, you have to know what's included.
Usually included
- Cabin accommodation
- Meals: breakfast, lunch, dinner in the main dining, buffet, and casual venues
- On-board entertainment: shows, concerts, films, dance nights, casino (on some lines)
- Facilities: pool, gym, library, decks
- Basic activities: dance lessons, cooking classes, etc.
Usually extra
- Alcohol and some soft drinks
- Specialty restaurants (often $20–50 per meal)
- Shore excursions
- Spa services
- Wi-Fi (often $10–30 per day)
- Gratuities (often $10–15 per person per day, auto-billed)
- Laundry
- Photography
Realistic total
A 7-night inside-cabin cruise might come out to:
- Base fare: ¥70,000–140,000
- Gratuities: ¥7,000–10,000 ($10–15 × 7 nights)
- Shore excursions: ¥20,000–50,000 (if you join tours)
- Wi-Fi: ¥10,000–20,000 (if you buy a plan)
- Drinks and specialty dining: ¥10,000–30,000
- Transport to port: a few thousand to tens of thousands
Total: about ¥120,000–350,000 per person
Style choices move this around significantly.
What Drives Price
Several factors.
1. Cabin type
As above — biggest single lever.
2. Cruise line and ship grade
Accessible lines:
- Costa Cruises
- Pacific Venus
Mid-tier:
- Princess Cruises (Diamond Princess, etc.)
- MSC Cruises (MSC Bellissima, etc.)
- Royal Caribbean
Premium:
- Asuka II
- Nippon Maru
- Luxury lines (Celebrity, Regent, etc.)
3. Itinerary
More accessible:
- Near-Japan (Seto Inland Sea, Okinawa)
- Korea (Busan, Jeju)
Mid-range:
- Japan circumnavigation
- Taiwan
Premium:
- Europe (Mediterranean, Northern Europe)
- Caribbean
- World cruises
4. Season
Prices swing dramatically with demand.
High season (expensive):
- Golden Week (early May)
- Summer holidays (July–August)
- New Year period
- Spring break
Low season (cheap):
- January–February
- June
- September–November (excluding typhoon season)
5. When you book
Early booking discount: 6–12 months ahead often nets 10–30% off.
Last-minute discount: 1–2 months out can be cheap if seats remain.
6. Length
Longer cruises usually have a lower per-night rate.
- 2–3 nights: ¥20,000–40,000 per night
- 4–7 nights: ¥15,000–30,000 per night
- 8+ nights: ¥10,000–25,000 per night
Saving on Cruises
Practical ways to cut cost.
1. Book early
Decided? Book quickly. Early-booking discounts are real and stack with promotions.
2. Target the off-season
January–February, June, and September–November (avoiding typhoon season) cut prices substantially.
3. Take an inside cabin
If cost dominates, take the inside cabin. Spend daytime in shared spaces — it works fine.
4. Start with a short cruise
First cruise or tight budget? 2–3 nights gets you in the door.
5. Consider drinks packages
If you drink a lot, all-inclusive beverage packages can beat per-drink pricing.
6. Be selective about shore excursions
Don't book a tour at every port. Reserve them for places where it really matters.
7. Use Wi-Fi minimally
Ship Wi-Fi is expensive. Save serious use for port Wi-Fi.
8. Specialty restaurants only when special
Use the main dining and buffet most nights. Save specialty restaurants for the occasion.
9. Group and loyalty discounts
Family or friend groups sometimes qualify. Returning customers of a line often do.
10. Watch promotions
Cruise-line and travel-agent promos (on-board credit, free upgrades, etc.) compound nicely with early booking.
FAQ
Q1: Cruises seem expensive — are they really?
When you remember that the fare includes accommodation, meals, and entertainment, the per-night value is often comparable to or better than equivalent hotel stays. Cruises that include strong dining can feel like a particularly good deal.
Q2: Solo supplement?
Most pricing assumes double occupancy. Solo travelers often pay a 150–200% supplement. Some ships now offer single cabins to soften this.
Q3: Kids' pricing?
Most lines offer kids' pricing — often around 50–70% of the adult fare. Some lines run "kids cruise free" promotions in specific periods.
Q4: How much for tips?
Often $10–15 per person per day, auto-billed. Some Japanese ships don't add gratuities.
Q5: When do I pay?
Usually a deposit at booking, with the balance due several weeks to months before sailing.
Q6: Cancellation fees?
Stronger as you get closer to departure. Read the cancellation terms; consider trip insurance.
Wrapping Up
Cruise pricing runs roughly ¥10,000–20,000 per night for an inside cabin and ¥30,000–50,000 for a balcony, with significant variation by line, itinerary, and season.
Fares cover accommodation, meals, and entertainment, which makes the all-in value attractive — but plan for the extras (alcohol, specialty dining, shore excursions, Wi-Fi).
Early booking, off-season selection, and matching the cabin to your priorities are the main levers. Find a cruise that matches your budget and enjoy the trip.
The cruise media from VELTRA, the agency offering local experience tours in over 150 countries. Built on staff sailing reports and thousands of yearly bookings, we make first-time cruise selection clearer through cruise line comparisons, port guides, and fare breakdowns.
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