Travel

21.7 million Americans will book cruises in 2026 – the biggest year in cruise history

As Spirit Airlines goes dark, airfares rise and the global jet fuel crisis reshapes summer travel, millions of Americans have quietly come to the same conclusion: Skip the airport altogether.

AAA projects that 21.7 million Americans will take a cruise in 2026 – a 53% jump from pre-pandemic levels in 2019 and the highest ever figure in the history of the US cruise industry. The figure represents a fundamental shift in the way Americans think about vacations, driven not only by wanderlust, but also by a cold comparison of what traveling actually costs.

Why cruises will win in 2026

The economy is impossible to ignore. The average domestic airfare in the US has risen to $465 – and that’s before checked bag fees, seat selection fees and the fuel surcharges that airlines are now openly adding to tickets. Spirit Airlines, which offered the only sub-$100 fare option on dozens of U.S. routes, ceased operations entirely on May 2. Budget airline trade groups are already lobbying Congress for a $2.5 billion bailout to prevent further collapses.

Against that backdrop, a seven-night Caribbean cruise – including accommodations, meals, entertainment and transportation between ports – can still be booked from $599 per person. The all-in nature of cruise prices has become the most powerful selling point in 2026. There are no baggage fees, no seat upgrades and no fuel surcharges at checkout.

“Consumers are becoming more informed about the true costs of travel,” said Stacy Lastoe, senior travel analyst at AAA. “When people actually sit down and compare a cruise to a comparable hotel-and-flight package, the cruise wins in value almost every time.”

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A new generation of ships

The timing of the demand increase coincides with what the industry is calling the most ambitious fleet expansion in decades. Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas – launched in 2024 and becoming the largest cruise ship in the world – has generated record interest among travelers who had never thought about cruising. MSC Cruises opened a permanent homeport in La Romana, Dominican Republic in 2026. Norwegian Cruise Line debuted two new ships built specifically for routes to Alaska and the Mediterranean.

The new generation of ships hardly resembles the cruise experience of ten years ago. The category offering now includes adults-only rooftop retreats, celebrity chef restaurants, surf simulators, thermal spa complexes and indoor cabins designed with floor-to-ceiling LED screens with ‘virtual ocean views’. Premium cabin categories on the latest ships compete with five-star boutique hotels at a fraction of the equivalent land cost.

The routes that stimulate growth

Caribbean itineraries remain the most booked, accounting for approximately 35% of all U.S. cruise departures. But the fastest growth comes from less traditional routes.

Alaska sailings have increased 28% year over year as travelers seek dramatic scenery without the complexity of international flights. Mediterranean cruises – which allow passengers to visit Rome, Barcelona, ​​Athens and Santorini in a single trip – are attracting travelers who would otherwise have booked a European flight itinerary now complicated by the fuel crisis and ongoing strikes. Short itineraries to the Bahamas and Mexico from the ports of Florida and Texas are attracting new cruisers looking to get into the category with low stakes.

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What to watch

The biggest challenge for the sector in the run-up to the summer is congestion at the ports. Several Caribbean destinations – including Nassau, St. Maarten and Cozumel – are managing record passenger volumes, and overtourism pressures are mounting at the most popular stops. A handful of ports have already introduced arrival limits per passenger for 2026 and 2027.

For now, though, the data tells a simple story. In a year marked by aviation chaos, the cruise industry is having the best 12 months in its history.


Sources: AAA 2026 Cruise Outlook Report · CBS News, “What Does the Spirit Airlines Closure Mean for Travelers?” May 5, 2026

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