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Cruising To The Heart of Alaska With Your Kids

Cruising to Alaska with kids on Royal Caribbean

Alaska is a place where we can be inspired and humbled by nature. Alaska will capture your imagination with its misty fjords, captivating wildlife, and rugged coastlines.

There are many ways for families of all abilities to enjoy the untamed natural beauty of Alaska. Still, cruising is the best mix of nature and creature comforts for this journey.

In this post, we will cover everything you need to know if you want to plan a cruise to Alaska with your family, and while many cruise lines sail to Alaska, to give you the most comprehensive guide possible, we will focus on Royal Caribbean.

When is the best time to cruise to Alaska with your kids?

Royal Caribbean offers Alaska sailings from May to September. Cruising earlier in the season can result in poor weather conditions requiring missing call ports. If you’re cruising later in the season, warmer weather can significantly erode the glaciers and snow-capped mountains that Alaska is famous for.

We recommend planning a cruise in early July to get the most out of your Alaskan cruise destinations while minimizing travel stress due to changing school start and end dates.

What are the best Royal Caribbean ships to book travel on when cruising to Alaska with kids?

Because of the weather, planning a cruise to Alaska differs significantly from cruising to most other destinations. It can be warm and sunny, or it can be cold, rainy, and windy.

It’s a safe bet that your family will be spending more time inside on this cruise than most other cruise itineraries. Because of that, it’s essential to pick the correct ship, the right room, and the right type of amenities to keep your whole family entertained.

Things to Do on Royal Caribbean’s Oasis-class ships vs. Quantum-class ships vs. Radiance-class ships

Royal Caribbean is sailing four ships for the 2023 season, Ovation of the Seas, Oasis of the Seas, Brilliance of the Seas, and Radiance of the Seas. Radiance and Brilliance fall into the cruise line’s Radiance class category, while Ovation of the Seas is from the line’s Quantum class, and Oasis of the Seas is from the line’s Oasis class of ships.

All four ships share some common activities and amenities to please families with children.

Suppose you’re lucky enough to get good weather throughout your journey. In that case, the smaller Radiance Class ships might best fit your family and your budget, but be warned – It’s not unheard of for the pools and outdoor activities to be closed on these sailings during lousy weather.

While Ovation and Oasis are technically two different classes of ship, they both offer significantly more onboard activities, but there are a few things that are special to both ships that I want to call out.

Kid-friendly Activities on Ovation of the Seas

Kid-friendly Activities on Oasis of the Seas –

If you are cruising to Alaska with kids on the younger side, I recommend booking on Oasis of the Seas. It is a little pricier than the others, but it offers far more assurance that the kids will have something to entertain them when it’s too cold to be outside.

Selecting a stateroom when cruising to Alaska with kids

Another consideration you’ll want to make when planning your cruise to Alaska is your stateroom category. If you’ve never been on a cruise before, or if you’ve never cruised with children – the standard rooms are tiny.

I sailed with my two children (7, 11) recently on another Oasis Class ship, Symphony of the Seas, and we had a hard time not tripping each other in a one-bedroom grand suite. If you’ll spend a lot of time inside your cabin with your family, splurge for one of the bigger rooms.

The good news, if you’re planning on sailing in the Radiance Class, is that the larger rooms there are much cheaper than on the Oasis and Quantum ships, though they lack the additional perks of Royal’s new Suite Program.

Family rooms we recommend if you’re cruising to Alaska with kids on Radiance or Brilliance of the Seas

If you’re cruising to Alaska with kids, the weather can sometimes be variable. While I might otherwise recommend an interior room or a smaller junior suite for other itineraries, in this case, I wouldn’t go to a class below the ones above.

Family rooms we recommend if you’re cruising to Alaska with kids on Oasis or Ovation of the Seas

A closer look at suite perks

In addition to more space, our room recommendations all come with specific perks for suite guests. These perks vary by ship class, but all suite guests get the following benefits.

Sky Class and Star Class Suite Perks

If you choose to sail on either Ovation or Oasis of the Seas, you’ll have additional perks to the ones I mentioned above based on your room category. You can find a full list of these perks on Royal Caribbean’s website, but I do want to call out a few that my family has gotten the most use from on our cruises.

Sky Class –

Star Class

Star Class is Royal Caribbean’s highest suite tier and has some incredible perks.

Now that we’ve covered the range of ship amenities, stateroom categories, and perks currently available for sailings to Alaska with Royal Caribbean, it’s time to get packing!

What to pack when cruising to Alaska with kids

Packing for a cruise to Alaska is a little bit of art and a little bit of science. With such variable weather conditions, bringing enough layers is the key to a comfortable experience. While not a comprehensive list, this is a good starting point for your trip.

Some other items I recommend packing if you’re cruising to Alaska with kids are

Picking out shore excursions when cruising to Alaska with kids

There are many different excursion types, lengths, physical fitness levels, and personal ability-specific excursions on every Royal Caribbean sailing. I find what one family loves, another will find disappointing, and I won’t make recommendations on specific excursions here. When you book a cruise, look at the available tours and see what works for your family.

I will offer up this: unless your family is highly active and has older kids (12+), don’t book a shore excursion every day. It will be too much, and everyone will be exhausted every day. Why?

Shore excursions usually begin in the morning, and some even require that you be ready to depart the ship by 7 AM before the Windjammer or Main Dining Room are open, so you’ll need to order room service in advance on those mornings, which can mean waking your crew up at 5 AM or earlier.

Most excursions come in 4, 6, 8, and 10-hour blocks. Still, those times don’t account for the time you’ll spend getting your excursion ticket and waiting for your excursion number to be called, nor do they account for the time you’ll spend getting back on the ship, where you’ll need to wait in line at the cruise terminal to go back through security.

On our last cruise, We had several excursions listed as 4 hours but took 7 when all was said and done. Our longest excursion, a 10-hour tour of Rome, ultimately ended up being 13 hours, with only one small break for lunch in the day’s schedule, and we missed our dining slot in the Main Dining Room that evening as well.

While cramming as much as possible into your cruise vacation is tempting if you’re traveling with kids, especially younger kids, it’s wise to bake in some downtime. If you’re taking a 7-day sailing, I recommend booking no more than three shore excursions so everyone has a few less chaotic days to recover and relax.

How to have a perfect family vacation when cruising to Alaska with kids

Remember when we talked about staterooms, and I kept going on-and-on about in-room dining and four-seater tables? I’ll tell you why that is now.

The best family vacation that you can have is the one that balances your adult desires to indulge in vacation luxuries with your children’s need for routine and structure.

Younger children need structure, routine, and rest to feel safe and happy. Traveling, especially if you’re flying somewhere, disrupts everything for them, leading to emotional dysregulation, lack of sleep, and eventual meltdowns when they become overstimulated.

At the same time, we, as adults, often want to participate as much as humanly possible while we’re on vacation, dining out every night, staying up late, doing shore excursions every day, and wringing the most out of that precious time off and money spent. And what do we end up with?

Tired, cranky kids who frustrate us and who are also frustrated with us for failing to attend to their needs. It doesn’t have to be this way if you’re cruising to Alaska with kids or cruising anywhere with your kids, for that matter.

You can recreate 90% of your child’s typical daily structure and routine by simply having dinner in your stateroom, and you can recreate 99% of it by having breakfast there as well.

When we’re at home, our children wake up. They have breakfast, brush their teeth, get dressed, wash their faces, make their beds, and get ready for the day. Depending on their age, they may go to school or daycare, or you may take them to the park.

Their morning routine doesn’t involve rushing out of the house to do those things with several hundred strangers, but that’s precisely what we try and make them do when we take them on vacation, and it’s alien and stressful for them.

Their routines are often the same at night. After a day of learning or exploring, they come home; we make them dinner, do our nightly rituals, get them ready for bed, and eventually send them off for a good night’s sleep, and that doesn’t usually involve restaurants and 90-minute fine dining establishments.

Instead of trekking everyone to the Main Dining Room or the Windjammer each night, pick one or two nights that your family will go for the full sit-down experience or the whole buffet experience, and have the rest of your meals in your stateroom.

If you’ve got a cranky, nibbler toddler, they can eat in their pajamas until they’re ready to sleep. If your slightly older kids have been overstimulated, the dinner table can be a place to unwind with their parents and talk about the day quietly.

You can easily transition from dinner to board games, a book, or something more familiar to their evening routine without waiting for dinner service to finish, going back through the ship, and you, as the parent, still get to enjoy the luxury of the food without the stress of trying to calm your child who is having a meltdown mid-dinner service.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this post and that it gives you some jumping-off points to consider. Cruising to Alaska with kids is a once-in-a-lifetime experience – where else will you see grizzly bears, orcas, seals, salmon, glaciers, and so much more?

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