Trip Bacon — The secret ingredient to the perfect getaway logo
Trip Bacon

I Booked The CHEAPEST and SMALLEST Cabin on a Cruise

Emma Cruises
Emma Cruises
🥈Expert
👁️ 990K views📅 3 years ago⏱️ 13:54
What This Creator Said
Creator RecommendsFull Ship Review🥈Expert Creator
OtherVeteran Cruiser

Source: Our analysis of the creator's lived experience, based on what they said in this video.

Creator's Key Takeaways

I've just disembarked a cruise where I had the cheapest cabin on the entire ship it was less than half the size of the average hotel room in the US

I did wonder if I would miss the outside space especially as we were cruising to some beautiful places but when I saw the price difference between a balcony and an inside cabin I knew that I had to give it a go

our first impressions of the cabin were that it was spacious it was bright

this location was actually fantastic we were a few meters away from a bar which was nice because we would pick up a drink on the way back to our cabin

Creator's Tips & Advice

Bring a daylight alarm clock for inside cabins to simulate natural light.
Pack a change of clothes in hand luggage in case luggage is delayed or wet.
Use concentrated squash for drinks in your cabin as an alternative to tap water.

🆕New to Cruising? This Creator Addresses:

Missing outside space or daylightThe price difference makes it worthwhile; use TV bridge camera or daylight alarm clock.
Feeling claustrophobic in a small cabinThe cabin felt spacious and bright; storage is adequate for two people.

Questions This Creator Answers

QWhat is it like to stay in the cheapest, smallest cabin on a cruise ship?
QWhy are inside cabins a huge part of the cruise market but rarely advertised?
QWould you miss having a balcony or windows on a cruise?

Topics Covered

Cabin Interior2 Happy BaconShip Condition1½ Happy BaconService Crew2 Happy BaconCrowd Capacity2½ Happy BaconItinerary Route2½ Happy BaconPort Destination2 Happy Bacon

Port Highlights

Gibraltar2½ Happy Bacon
Gran Canaria2½ Happy Bacon
La Palma2½ Happy Bacon
How to read the Trip Bacon Score
Happy Bacon — creators loved this aspect
Sad Bacon — creators took issue with this
Meh — no strong opinion either way

Scale: 0–5 strips in half-step increments. 0 = “meh”, 5 = “bacon bliss”. Aggregated from creator-review sentiment, weighted by channel expertise.

About our Bacon Score methodology
YouTube Video Description

I’ve just disembarked a cruise where I had the cheapest cabin on the entire ship, it was less than half the size of the average hotel room in the US and it was located right in the middle of the ship with no windows or access to daylight at all. On the ship there were 293 inside cabins which meant that there could be almost 1000 people in inside cabins just on this cruise alone. Inside cabins are a huge part of the cruise market, but cruise lines rarely advertise them. I wanted to find out why. I did wonder if I’d miss the outside space, especially given that we were cruising to some beautiful places but when I saw the price difference between an inside and a balcony, I knew I had to give it a go. I do get seasick and the seasickness bags did come out during this cruise but I didn’t think too much about that when booking my cabin. I hoped that the lack of daylight wouldn’t be too much of a problem, I hoped that we wouldn’t feel claustrophobic and that the cabin would be clean with plenty of storage. I knew the ship was built in 2001 but I hoped that the cabins had been refurbished since then. This image and this plan on the Norwegian website was all that I had to go on and to me, this looked like a TV from 2001. I wondered if this cruise would be like stepping back in time. On a cruise you can either book a cruise fare that includes picking your cabin location on the ship, or you can just let the cruise line decide and usually this is cheaper. I wanted to take this cruise as cheaply as possible so decided to let the cruise line pick. This type of cabin is called a guaranteed cabin because you’re guaranteed to at least get what you’ve paid for, but these cabins are usually the left over cabins as everybody picks the “better” cabins. The Norwegian Sun is 13 decks high and 848 ft long which is about 8 planes in a line. She has inside cabins from deck 4 all the way up to deck 10, I could be given a cabin on any deck and from right at the front of the ship, to right at the back. I could have a cabin with an adjoining door to the cabin next door, I could have one in a ‘noisey’ location, I could even have one which was sideways compared to the rest of the cabins. I had no idea. I was secretly hoping that I would get a cabin in the middle of the ship so that I didn’t have a long walk to get down to the lower decks for dinner, or up to the higher decks for snacks in the buffet. My cabin was actually further from the buffet than I would have liked, but more about that later. Apart from that I wasn’t really worried about my location, and it’s a good job I wasn’t because many would say that I was given one of the worst locations on the ship. A couple of weeks before the cruise I received an email saying that my luggage tags were ready to print out and on these luggage tags was the cabin number 7314. I went straight to the Norwegian cruise line website and found my cabin right at the front of deck 7. On most cabin decks you’ll find that the whole deck is cabins so I was interested to see that my cabin was between the art gallery and the kids clubs. I had visions of the kids running up and down the corridor but hoped it wouldn’t be like that. The inside cabin we were staying in was around 13 metres squared which is very similar to the size of a shipping container. It was 9 foot wide which is around the width of a bus but it wasn’t as long as a bus, think of the cabin as a short little bus. These cabins are made fully formed before they are put onto the cruise ship so I knew that they couldn’t have made too many changes since the ship was launched. Occasionally cruise ships will add extra cabins and sometimes they actually split the cruise ship in half to fit in another section, but once a cabin is in a cruise ship it’s pretty much there forever. Headshave video: https://youtu.be/ztypuWEmDO4 What happens when you flush a cruise ship toilet?: https://emmacruises.com/cruise-ship-toilets-what-happens-when-you-flush-illustrated-guide/#:~:text=When%20a%20toilet%20is%20flushed,clean%20enough%20to%20do%20so. ▶ Stay up to date: http://EmmaCruises.com/News ▶ Let's get you on a cruise!: https://EmmaCruises.com/Book-a-Cruise/ *** ▶ Background World Map (Use Code EMMACRUISES For a Discount): https://enjoythewood.com/emmacruises ▶ Daylight Lamp: https://emmacruises.com/lamp ▶ Don't make the WORST CRUISE MISTAKE: https://emmacruises.com/cruise-travel-insurance-why-you-need-it-and-how-to-get-it-step-by-step-guide/ 🥳🥳 emma@emmacruises.com Join this channel to get access to exclusive perks like a weekly podcast and early ad free access to videos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu4C8c3h9SKdkxnOwIAiHeA/join