Best 7 day Alaskan Cruise Line?

6,313 Views | 77 Replies | Last: 11 days ago by Col. Steve Austin
Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Ok ….. who is the BEST for 7 day cruise to Alaska? Never cruised before…. Want the best.
JMac03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Princess and Holland do Alaskan the best. Glacier Bay is highly recommended, and those 2 cruise lines plus Norwegian can visit there. Norwegian will definitely have a younger vibe over the other 2.

Happy to help if needed, email is in my profile.
Marauder Blue 6
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I've done four with the most recent one last week. My favorite was the Holland America ms Koningsdam round trip from Vancouver up and back through the Inside Passage with a visit to Glacier Bay NP.
Mathguy64
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Princess. Not just the cruise and Glacier Bay NP but they have lodges all over.

Denali. Talkeetna. Copper River.
scd88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Holland. I've done it 3 times.
Caladan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.
maddiedou
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
What about Disney

Edit. Just asking never been
maddiedou
wangus12
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
We did Princess a few years ago and it was well done.
Hincemm
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
only word of warning for holland america is the demographic.

lots of older folks; like average of 65+.

for me and kids (11, 16, and 19), it wasn't the most 'fun.' not many activities, if that's you're thing.

on quantum of the seas right now (royal caribbean) and loving it.

Col. Steve Austin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Hincemm said:

only word of warning for holland america is the demographic.

lots of older folks; like average of 65+.

for me and kids (11, 16, and 19), it wasn't the most 'fun.' not many activities, if that's you're thing.

on quantum of the seas right now (royal caribbean) and loving it.


Yes, my wife (66) and I (70) just did the Inside Passage on HA Nieuw Amsterdam two weeks ago. Even we found the entertainment to be lacking compared to our previous cruises on Royal Caribbean. We're not party animals but we like to have a good time. Everything else was fine for the most part. Nice ship, good food, etc.
I am not the Six Million Dollar Man, but I might need that surgery. "We have the technology, we can rebuild him!"
sam callahan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Been twice on Norwegian. Once a couple of years ago and once 10 years before that.

Big difference in experience between the two, the better experience being the first one.NCL has cutback quite a bit on hospitality services and time in ports (and which ports they use).

So when you get NCL recommendations, find out how recent the trip was.
Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Caladan said:

What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.


Never been on a cruise before so I don't know how to answer you.

We like to eat and drink and probably do a fair amount of excursions and definitely see the beautiful scenery. We also like small town vibes so probably would like to see a couple of those.
Caladan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Texaspainter said:

Caladan said:

What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.


Never been on a cruise before so I don't know how to answer you.

We like to eat and drink and probably do a fair amount of excursions and definitely see the beautiful scenery. We also like small town vibes so probably would like to see a couple of those.
Thanks for replying. There are three main types of AK cruises. You can do an "expedition" type of cruise, which are usually on small boats that may carry anywhere between 15 and 100 passengers. These types of cruises do not go into a port every day. Instead, they stay out in the wilderness, where you go zodiac cruising to visit the glaciers, or you get put on the land to go hiking. Most of these boats also have kayaks as well. This type of cruise more or less forces you to meet other passengers, since everyone sits down for the meals at the same time. It is a totally different experience than what you would get on a large ship.

Large boats, typically 800-900 up to several thousand passengers will go to a port every day. The cruise line will have small trips/activities that you can sign up for, or you can just explore on your own. These ships will have more options for food and drink and entertainment.

There are cruise lines that operate "mid-sized" boats of 250 to 400 passengers. Some offer a varied schedule, where you do outdoor activities on some days, and go into a port town on other days. These will have great options for food and drink, but little to no entertainment.

For a small boat experience, check out Un-cruise Adventures and see if they are still around. Their boats carry around 80 passengers. For a medium size boat, look at HX Expeditions (formerly known as Hurtigruten). They have very modern ships that carry approximately 400 passengers. A typical itinerary will have a mixture of outdoor days and port days. Their cruises are all-inclusive, so you don't have to worry about extra costs for food and drinks. I believe that National Geographic also uses boats in the mid-sized class, and they seem to be highly regarded.

For large boats, I would say to look at Oceania. Their boats are at the smaller end of the large boat class. Our second AK cruise was on a 900 passenger boat from Oceania, and although we found out that we didn't care to be on a boat that large, I have to say that they did a pretty decent job.

C, who is currently in AK, on the Roald Amundsen
OilManAg91
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Has anyone done the Seabourn Quest ship from Juneau to Vancouver, or any general experience on Seabourn? It's a smaller ship with about 450 guest capacity, and bills itself as more of a luxury experience but I have only been on Royal Caribbean and Norwegian so I don't have a feel if the extra cost is worth it.
JMac03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
OilManAg91 said:

Has anyone done the Seabourn Quest ship from Juneau to Vancouver, or any general experience on Seabourn? It's a smaller ship with about 450 guest capacity, and bills itself as more of a luxury experience but I have only been on Royal Caribbean and Norwegian so I don't have a feel if the extra cost is worth it.


Seabourn is definitely more luxury and will be a completely different experience than what you find on a mass market cruise line. I've booked Seabourn for clients, just not for Alaska. If I can assist, my email is in my profile.
Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Caladan said:

Texaspainter said:

Caladan said:

What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.


Never been on a cruise before so I don't know how to answer you.

We like to eat and drink and probably do a fair amount of excursions and definitely see the beautiful scenery. We also like small town vibes so probably would like to see a couple of those.
Thanks for replying. There are three main types of AK cruises. You can do an "expedition" type of cruise, which are usually on small boats that may carry anywhere between 15 and 100 passengers. These types of cruises do not go into a port every day. Instead, they stay out in the wilderness, where you go zodiac cruising to visit the glaciers, or you get put on the land to go hiking. Most of these boats also have kayaks as well. This type of cruise more or less forces you to meet other passengers, since everyone sits down for the meals at the same time. It is a totally different experience than what you would get on a large ship.

Large boats, typically 800-900 up to several thousand passengers will go to a port every day. The cruise line will have small trips/activities that you can sign up for, or you can just explore on your own. These ships will have more options for food and drink and entertainment.

There are cruise lines that operate "mid-sized" boats of 250 to 400 passengers. Some offer a varied schedule, where you do outdoor activities on some days, and go into a port town on other days. These will have great options for food and drink, but little to no entertainment.

For a small boat experience, check out Un-cruise Adventures and see if they are still around. Their boats carry around 80 passengers. For a medium size boat, look at HX Expeditions (formerly known as Hurtigruten). They have very modern ships that carry approximately 400 passengers. A typical itinerary will have a mixture of outdoor days and port days. Their cruises are all-inclusive, so you don't have to worry about extra costs for food and drinks. I believe that National Geographic also uses boats in the mid-sized class, and they seem to be highly regarded.

For large boats, I would say to look at Oceania. Their boats are at the smaller end of the large boat class. Our second AK cruise was on a 900 passenger boat from Oceania, and although we found out that we didn't care to be on a boat that large, I have to say that they did a pretty decent job.

C, who is currently in AK, on the Roald Amundsen


Thanks for this response. Great information! .
Col. Steve Austin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Texaspainter said:

Caladan said:

What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.


Never been on a cruise before so I don't know how to answer you.

We like to eat and drink and probably do a fair amount of excursions and definitely see the beautiful scenery. We also like small town vibes so probably would like to see a couple of those.
Here's the itinerary for our Inside Passage cruise two weeks ago, 7 nights on the HA Nieuw Amsterdam:

We began our trip with a 3 night stay in Vancouver. The cruise itinerary follows.

Day 1 Vancouver: All Aboard 3:30 PM, sail away around 4 PM

Day 2 At sea - Scenic Cruising, Inside Passage

Day 3 Ketchikan, AK. Arrival 6:30 AM, Departure 3 PM. We did the Lumberjack Show (fun) and Crab Feast (good, not great. it was all-u-can-eat but Dungeness crab)

Day 4 Juneau, AK. Arrival 10 AM, Departure 9 PM. We did a dog sledding excursion on a glacier. Helicopter ride to/from. My wife's bucket list item and her favorite part of the entire trip.

Day 5 Skagway, AK. Arrival 5:30 AM, Departure 9 PM. We did a White Pass & Yukon Railway/show/salmon bake Red Onion Salon (former brothel) excursion. Ride bus up to Canadian border, ride the train back down. Bus to Liarsville for show and salmon bake, then Red Onion. The ride up/back was really good, beautiful scenery. The show was dumb/corny and salmon bake kinda sucked. You eat outdoors and the food got cold before we could eat it. Red Onion Saloon tour was not as interesting as expected. Would do the scenic bus/train portion again and skip the rest.

Day 6 At sea, Glacier Bay. Arrival 7 AM, Departure 4 PM.

Day 7 At sea, College Fjord. Arrival 6 PM, departure 8 PM.

Day 8 Departure @ Whittier, AK. We continued from there on the Denali Land Cruise as part of our trip. All day scenic train ride to Denali. 3 nights in Holland America Denali Lodge with selected excursions or free time then bus to Anchorage for one night in the Capt Cook Hotel before flying home.

All in all it was a great experience!
I am not the Six Million Dollar Man, but I might need that surgery. "We have the technology, we can rebuild him!"
Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Thanks Col. Steve Austin!
Aggie87
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
If you haven't been to Alaska before, and might not go back, I'd consider doing a combination land/sea trip.

We did that in summer 2022 and it was amazing. We flew into Fairbanks, did a Chena River cruise, then visited an Indian village there, and visited a sled dog facility. Then took a bus ride down to the Denali area and spent a couple days there. Visited the National Park, which is breathtaking (and seeing Denali is something you won't get to do if you only do a cruise), and drove jeeps a few hours down the dirt road Denali Highway (which used to be the only way to access Denali), outside the National Park. We saw caribou/reindeer, Dall sheep, and moose in the park as well.

Then a 9-10 hour train ride down to Anchorage, in a glass domed car, which gave some amazing views of the mountains that went on forever. In Anchorage we visited some friends and also did a hike at Flattop Trailhead, which gave us a nice panoramic view of the city and coastline.

After that we took a shorter train ride (~2.5 hrs) to Whittier and boarded our ship (Holland America's MS Noordam). From there we visited:

Hubbard Glacier
Glacier Bay National Park
Skagway
Davidson Glacier via catamaran and canoe
Juneau
Whale watching excursion
Ketchikan
ending in Vancouver, where we spent a couple of days exploring the city

I think doing the land portion adds significantly to the overall experience, and is worth the effort/cost.
TRD-Ferguson
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
We've done 3. All on Princess. Enjoyed every one of them. Always booked excursions. Wife and I are both over 65. We were on the young end of the age spectrum on each cruise.

If we do another cruise we'll take a small boat to have more access to the nature related stuff.

One thing I will tell you is avoid a trip ending departure out of Vancouver if at all possible. Our last cruise ended there. Complete disaster. I don't know if it's the cruise lines or the airport but it was totally disorganized.

Alaska is stunningly beautiful!

Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Thanks to everyone who has replied! This has been so informative. Really appreciate the detailed posts regarding your trips. This helps alot.

So here is another question…. Do you think it's worth it to engage a travel agency to help book all this for us? Being our first time to cruise, I think I really like the idea of handing this over to a professional to plan. Thoughts?
JMac03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Texaspainter said:

Thanks to everyone who has replied! This has been so informative. Really appreciate the detailed posts regarding your trips. This helps alot.

So here is another question…. Do you think it's worth it to engage a travel agency to help book all this for us? Being our first time to cruise, I think I really like the idea of handing this over to a professional to plan. Thoughts?
I'll let others chime in as well, but as a travel agent, I would say yes. We will take care of all of this for you, provide additional information, etc. Sometimes we can get extra perks or savings (but not always). But you do get our expertise. I do not currently charge fees, thus it would not cost you any additional to use me. Some agents do (and rightfully so, you are paying for their years of knowledge and expertise). This year alone I've had 20+ cabins travel to Alaska, with several of them being cruisetours (land and cruise).
Hincemm
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Totes agree with jmac.

Assuming no fees, it is literally the exact same cost (sometimes cheaper) and you get the benefit of having a go to for questions or if problems arise.
matt.hince@mei-travel.com
Mathguy64
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
When we did our Princess tour cruise a number of years back I did it through a Princess agent. They were constantly in contact about upgrade options and advice on which room was better or worse on the ship. I think we ended with 3 separate room upgrades and turned down a 4th. It was an upgrade but to a room almost in the bow that we thought might be rough if the weather turned bad.
harringtontravelco
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Not all cruise lines or itineraries are the same some focus more on glaciers, while others offer better wildlife viewing or unique port experiences. A good advisor helps match you to the right one based on your preferences.

Pre- and post-cruise stays in places like Vancouver, Seattle, or Anchorage can really elevate the trip.

If you already have a trusted advisor, lean on them. If not, my contact info is in my bio and I'd love to help.
Brooke Harrington
Hyatt Certified Confidant
AmaWaterways Specialist
Certified Sandals Specialist
www.harringtontravelco.com
brooke@harringtontravelco.com
IG: harringtontravelco
TRD-Ferguson
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Definitely use a travel agent. They know the territory.
scd88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Col. Steve Austin said:

Texaspainter said:

Caladan said:

What type of cruise do you want? There's a huge difference between the experiences that you get from the different size boats.


Never been on a cruise before so I don't know how to answer you.

We like to eat and drink and probably do a fair amount of excursions and definitely see the beautiful scenery. We also like small town vibes so probably would like to see a couple of those.
Here's the itinerary for our Inside Passage cruise two weeks ago, 7 nights on the HA Nieuw Amsterdam:

We began our trip with a 3 night stay in Vancouver. The cruise itinerary follows.

Day 1 Vancouver: All Aboard 3:30 PM, sail away around 4 PM

Day 2 At sea - Scenic Cruising, Inside Passage

Day 3 Ketchikan, AK. Arrival 6:30 AM, Departure 3 PM. We did the Lumberjack Show (fun) and Crab Feast (good, not great. it was all-u-can-eat but Dungeness crab)

Day 4 Juneau, AK. Arrival 10 AM, Departure 9 PM. We did a dog sledding excursion on a glacier. Helicopter ride to/from. My wife's bucket list item and her favorite part of the entire trip.

Day 5 Skagway, AK. Arrival 5:30 AM, Departure 9 PM. We did a White Pass & Yukon Railway/show/salmon bake Red Onion Salon (former brothel) excursion. Ride bus up to Canadian border, ride the train back down. Bus to Liarsville for show and salmon bake, then Red Onion. The ride up/back was really good, beautiful scenery. The show was dumb/corny and salmon bake kinda sucked. You eat outdoors and the food got cold before we could eat it. Red Onion Saloon tour was not as interesting as expected. Would do the scenic bus/train portion again and skip the rest.

Day 6 At sea, Glacier Bay. Arrival 7 AM, Departure 4 PM.

Day 7 At sea, College Fjord. Arrival 6 PM, departure 8 PM.

Day 8 Departure @ Whittier, AK. We continued from there on the Denali Land Cruise as part of our trip. All day scenic train ride to Denali. 3 nights in Holland America Denali Lodge with selected excursions or free time then bus to Anchorage for one night in the Capt Cook Hotel before flying home.

All in all it was a great experience!



I did this exact same cruise, Steve. I just didn't do the Denali extension but most of my party did. I really enjoyed this cruise a lot.
scd88
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
TRD-Ferguson said:

Definitely use a travel agent. They know the territory.


JMac helped me with my Alaskan cruise last year and I would agree - this helped a ton.
maddiedou
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Such a good read about experiences
maddiedou
SbisaVictim95
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Aggie87 said:

If you haven't been to Alaska before, and might not go back, I'd consider doing a combination land/sea trip.

We did that in summer 2022 and it was amazing. We flew into Fairbanks, did a Chena River cruise, then visited an Indian village there, and visited a sled dog facility. Then took a bus ride down to the Denali area and spent a couple days there. Visited the National Park, which is breathtaking (and seeing Denali is something you won't get to do if you only do a cruise), and drove jeeps a few hours down the dirt road Denali Highway (which used to be the only way to access Denali), outside the National Park. We saw caribou/reindeer, Dall sheep, and moose in the park as well.

Then a 9-10 hour train ride down to Anchorage, in a glass domed car, which gave some amazing views of the mountains that went on forever. In Anchorage we visited some friends and also did a hike at Flattop Trailhead, which gave us a nice panoramic view of the city and coastline.

After that we took a shorter train ride (~2.5 hrs) to Whittier and boarded our ship (Holland America's MS Noordam). From there we visited:

Hubbard Glacier
Glacier Bay National Park
Skagway
Davidson Glacier via catamaran and canoe
Juneau
Whale watching excursion
Ketchikan
ending in Vancouver, where we spent a couple of days exploring the city

I think doing the land portion adds significantly to the overall experience, and is worth the effort/cost.
I'm loyal to Royal but the only cruise I've done outside the brand was Princess. Pretty much this exact itinerary back in 2019. My parents did it about a decade before and told me when I was ready to go with Princess because they take care of everything, and they own the lodges and because they've been cruising those waters for over 50 years they get the priority spots in Glacier Bay, which limits access.

Thought this would be my only time going so I went for the 4 day land tour before the 7 day one-way Southbound cruise. Landed in Fairbanks - reps there to answer questions, take your bags and get you loaded on the bus. Dropped at the lodge, leave bags outside like you would on a cruise the last night. Loaded up the next day for a bus to Denali, bags show up in room... stayed there 2 days, leave bags out and ride the train to the ship. Bags show up at the stateroom. Couldn't have been easier.

Highly recommend one that does a day scenic cruising through Glacier Bay. Just unreal.

Also recommend doing the White Pass Railroad excursion in Skagway and extending your stay by a day or two in Vancouver on the back end.

If you do a land tour in addition to the cruise, I recommend doing the land portion first - you get that really long flight day out of the way at the front and you get to relax on board and have the awesome city of Vancouver to explore on the back end.

Of course, now that I've done it I will definitely go back and just do a 7 day roundtrip Alaska cruise out of Vancouver in the future, probably with Royal.
Texaspainter
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
This is all good info, y'all keep it coming!!!!
BQ2001
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
If you can do it, I would say do a land portion up in at least Denali. Do at least 2 night there, don't do a 1 night stay because you will have zero time in the huge park and even 2 days is not much, but at least you can get on the bus and get into the park.

We did a land/sea with Princess (all the travel and hotels are taken care of) and it was great (plus we did a few days on on own in Kenai/Seward before the cruise). I would recommend doing the land portion first since there can be some longer travel days, then end with the cruise and relax.

Our land portion was day in Anchorage, 2 nights in Denali, 1 night in another little town that the plane tours took off in (really long name of the town), then a train down to get on the boat.

Then the cruise was one way from Seward to Vancouver and we had a TON of time in each port. I did mostly hiking but the rest of our group was able to do 2 excursions in each port. It was near the summer equinox so light until midnight and after most places.
TXTransplant
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Just an FYI…the road into Denali NP is closed at mile 43, and will be until (at least) after summer of 2026.

Just keep that in mind if you are planning a land trip. Most people would say that most of the best experiences in the park are past mile 43.

There is an option to do a flightseeing tour, but it is substantially more expensive, and may not be great if you are prone to motion sickness. We stayed at Denali Backcountry Lodge in 2021. Some of the people staying there with us opted to fly back out rather than take the bus, and they said they got sick.
Col. Steve Austin
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
scd88 said:

TRD-Ferguson said:

Definitely use a travel agent. They know the territory.


JMac helped me with my Alaskan cruise last year and I would agree - this helped a ton.
Same here. JMac worked with my wife to make our arrangements and she was a big help. She even helped her sort out an issue with her Holland America account when HA did not. Highly recommend utilizing her services!
I am not the Six Million Dollar Man, but I might need that surgery. "We have the technology, we can rebuild him!"
JMac03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Col. Steve Austin said:

scd88 said:

TRD-Ferguson said:

Definitely use a travel agent. They know the territory.


JMac helped me with my Alaskan cruise last year and I would agree - this helped a ton.
Same here. JMac worked with my wife to make our arrangements and she was a big help. She even helped her sort out an issue with her Holland America account when HA did not. Highly recommend utilizing her services!


Thank you both!!
Last Page
Page 1 of 3
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.