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Solo cruises are expensive due to the single supplement fee. Cruise fares are advertised per person based on two guests sharing a cabin. When booking as a solo traveler, you pay nearly double the advertised price because cruise lines want to maximize revenue by filling cabins with two paying passengers rather than one.
A single supplement is an extra fee cruise lines charge solo travelers for occupying a cabin alone — typically 50–100% on top of the per-person rate. The most reliable way to avoid it is to watch for sailings where cruise lines waive or reduce this fee — these promotions appear periodically and are worth tracking closely.
When hunting for cruise deals, aim for a base fare below $100 per night. A price rating scale for solo cruisers: under $60/night is amazing, $60–85 is great, $85–105 is good, $105–120 is okay, $120–150 is not good, and over $150/night is considered expensive.
The best approach is to track cost-per-night pricing across sailings, watch for single supplement waivers, and move quickly on last-minute inventory. Monitoring pricing across multiple cruise lines — either manually or through aggregator tools — can surface deals faster than checking individual sites one by one.
Yes — last-minute inventory is one of the best opportunities for solo cruisers, as cruise lines would rather fill a cabin at a reduced rate than sail with it empty. These deals typically surface 1 to 30 days before sailing, depending on how the cruise line forecasts unsold cabin inventory. Solo travelers have a competitive advantage here since they only need to coordinate with themselves, unlike couples or groups who must align schedules. Monitoring prices for your preferred home port regularly is the most effective way to catch these short-notice drops before they sell out.
Cruise deal alerts notify you when fares drop on sailings that match your criteria — typically by departure port, cruise length, or price threshold. Many cruise line websites and third-party aggregators offer email or push notifications. Setting preferences by home port ensures you're alerted before short-notice inventory sells out, since last-minute deals can disappear within hours of posting.
A repositioning cruise is a one-way trip where a cruise ship moves between regions, such as from New York to Miami for winter or across the Atlantic between continents. These cruises are typically cheaper because they have fewer ports of call, require passengers to fly to/from different cities, and have lower overall demand compared to traditional vacation cruises.
Onboard credits can be obtained through travel agents, promotions, loyalty programs, cruise line credit cards, group bookings, and cruise line shareholder programs. While they don't reduce your fare price, onboard credits can pay for specialty dining, excursions, and other activities during your cruise.