If you were looking to book a cruise and you read cabin reviews like this, this and this, would you book it? I did.
If you imagine somebody taking a cruise you probably picture them cruising in a cabin that looks something like this but I’ve just disembarked a cruise ship where 51% of the cabins didn’t have a balcony and 39% didn’t even have a window.
The average inside cabin on a cruise ship is around half the size of the average hotel room in the US and on my last cruise, I booked the smallest and cheapest cabin on the entire ship.
When I booked this cruise I decided not to pick the specific position of my cabin, this saved me a little money but it did mean that I risked being given what many would consider a ‘bad’ cabin location. Usually the cabins that are assigned by the cruise line are the cabins that nobody else has picked, the left over cabins.
We were sailing onboard the Carnival Magic, a ship built in 2011. Despite the ship not being that old by cruise ship standards I had heard quite a few things about the cabins being dated and run down.
The ship has 1845 cabins and at full capacity she can hold a little over 4500 guests.
The ship has 14 decks that are open to passengers with more decks further down for crew. I could have had a cabin anywhere from deck 1 right up to deck 10, I could have been right at the front or right at the back.
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emma@emmacruises.com
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