Tuesday, October 22, 2024
46.0°F

Prices for Carnival cruises are lower than normal

| April 14, 2013 9:00 PM

NEW YORK (AP) - Carnival Cruise Lines prices have taken a dip this spring, according to pricing data, and some industry observers are blaming headlines over problems on several Carnival ships.

Todd Elliott, owner of Cruise Vacation Outlet, said his agents have seen a drop in price of 20 percent or more for equivalent cruises.

"Rates are far lower than I have seen in a while for example, the Carnival Dream, seven nights, Eastern Caribbean out of Port Canaveral, May 4 is $299 per person," he said. "Last year a similar Carnival cruise would have been at least $399 or higher."

Elliott added that this "seems to be 100 percent a Carnival Cruise Lines issue and not across all cruise lines."

The drop in fares began following an engine fire on the Carnival Triumph in mid-February. The ship lost power and passengers endured filthy conditions as the Triumph was towed to Mobile, Ala., resurrecting stories of a similar incident from 2010 aboard the Carnival Splendor. A number of sailings on the Triumph were cancelled as it undergoes repairs. Since then, cruises were cancelled aboard the Carnival Sunshine while it undergoes a makeover; a trip on the Carnival Dream ended early, with passengers flown home from the Caribbean due to a generator failure, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control's Vessel Sanitation Program gave a failing grade to the Carnival Fascination.

Priceline Cruises data showed Carnival prices down from a year ago for April-June departures, including Alaska trips down 20 percent, Bermuda down 18 percent and Mediterranean down 21 percent.

Prices for inside cabins on the Carnival Glory's July 21 sailing to Canada are down 40 percent - $479 per person now compared to $799 last December, according to the price predictor at AllThingsCruise.com.

But there are also seasonal factors in lower prices. Stewart Chiron, who covers the industry at Cruiseguy.com, says "sailings this time of the year tend to have booking weakness as spring break ends and families are preparing for fourth quarter of school year."

Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor in chief of CruiseCritic.com, said prices dip in late spring not just because of the school calendar, but also due to seasonal popularity in destinations: "The Mediterranean and Alaska are just getting started and the Caribbean is winding up its high season."

Asked to comment, Carnival spokeswoman Jennifer de la Cruz acknowledged "there are some really fantastic rates available right now. That being said, the rates are not completely unprecedented. This sort of pricing has been offered tactically in the past" in the pre-summer, post-spring break period.

An April 4 industry research report from Morgan Stanley, the financial services corporation, blamed "recent incidents onboard various Carnival ships" for what travel agents said were "record levels of cancellations and very low bookings from new cruisers. We hadn't seen such a negative report since the Concordia incident." The Costa Concordia sank off Italy in 2012, killing 32 people.