D.I.Y. shore excursions
Book your own cruise excursions for up to 40% less than the cruise ships charge
Cruise lines contract with local outfitters to provide shore excursions—at a bulk discount—then charge you anywhere from ten to forty percent more than the retail cost of the excursion. Great business, if you can get in on that.
There are two ways to get around the inflated prices cruise lines charge for shore excursions, whether it's an ATV jungle adventure, snorkel trip, or shopping jaunt.
Wing It
Simply stroll right past the cruise lines guys holding up signs for the "official," sanctioned excursions and, beyond them, you'll see wandering touts, kiosks, tour agency offices (often across the street from the cruise terminal), or a local tourist office happy to sell you the exact same experiences—often riding on the same bus as the other ship passengers—for much, much less.
Some people are nervous about waiting until the last minute, of course, so you can always:
England shore excursions Scotland shore excursions Ireland shore excursions
Book ahead... just not via the ship
Find the local travel agencies on your own and book ahead with them. Good resources for doing this are guidebooks, Google, and the forums on Cruisecritic.com.
Another hint: use those forums on Cruisecritic.com or Cruisemates.com to assemble a group of like-minded passengers who will be on your ship and are interested in a tour you've lined up. Get ten people to commit, and you can approach the local outfitter with a group of your own and often negotiate a discounted rate.
If all of that sounds like too much work, or too dicey, you can always still go with a middleman booking agency—just one who takes a smaller cut than the cruise lines.
Several websites have sprung up to feed this need, including our partners Viator.com and City-Discovery.com (both generalists, not limited to shore excursions; also good for booking private transfers from ports into major cities) plus shore excursions specialists like Shoretrips.com.
England shore excursions Scotland shore excursions Ireland shore excursions
DIY Drawbacks
There are some drawbacks to booking your own shore excursions (beyond the obvious convenience of letting the ship take care of it).
- Less quality assurance (there's unlikely to be anything wrong with a company you find on your own, but with the cruise line you know they've vetted the local guides they use).
- If you pre-book tours privately but your ship changes itinerary (due to weather, for example), refunds can be difficult.
- If you wait and wing it, popular tours might sell out (especially if many ships are in port that day).
- If you are late, the boat will not wait (huge reason to think hard about going it alone). Solutions:
- Plan to arrive back 30–60 minutes early.
- If you're interested in an all-day excursion (which are likelier to experience delays getting back to port), it may best simply to book it via the ship.
- Viator.com - A generalist site for booking day trous and activities, with a special "Shore Excursions" section in many cities. Also good for booking private transfers from ports into major cities. Partner
- City-discovery.com - A generalist site for booking day trous and activities, with a special "Shore Excursions" section in many cities. Also good for booking private transfers from ports into major cities. Partner
- Shoretrips.com - Specialist in shore trip excursions.
- Cruisedirect.com - One of the top cruise discounters in the business, consistently underselling the higher rack rates you'll see posted on the web sites of the cruise companies themselves. CruiseDirect.com even has a last-minute page with discounts on soon-to-leave ships.Partner
- Cruisecompete.com - You know the commercials for LendingTree.com? That whole "When banks compete, you win..." spiel? Well this the same thing for cruises. You put in the date and destination and ship (any or all of those), and it sends your cruise request to a whole bunch of cruise brokers and discounters. Each of them then contacts you with a quote on how little they can do that cruise for you. Basically, it does the shopping around for you, pretty cool, huh?Partner
- Vacationstogo.com
- icruise.com
- Cruises.com
- Priceline.com - The famous discounter of hotels rooms also does cruises.Partner
- Cruise411.com
- Whitetravel.com
- Cruisecritic.com - Independent website devoted to cruising in all its forms, with very active user forums and loads of intel on ships, cruise lines, ports of call, etc. Probably the #1 place to go online for cruise info. Now owned by TripAdvisor—though they apparently know you don't mess with success and their presence is largely unfelt. (Disclosure: Several of the senior editors of this site happen to be friends of mine—though I've been recommending it since long before I met any of them, and before they worked there.)
- Cruisemates.com - Similar to CruiseCritic—though rather smaller—with good message boards and some editorial content as well.
- Singlescruise.com - Books groups of singles (ages 21 on up, but mostly 35–55) onto cruise ships, offering its own onboard program of events and mixers—and, most importantly, matching you with a same-gender cabin mate (of roughly the same age) so you don't have to pay the dreaded "single supplement." Nice Northern Ireland itinerary.