Repositioning cruise

View of the Suez Canal taken from a cruise ship on a repositioning cruise

A repositioning cruise (repo cruise) is a cruise in which the embarkation port and the disembarkation port are different. This is a less common type of cruise; in the majority of cruises the ship's final destination is the same as the starting point.

Some cruise ships relocate due to change in season (usually during the spring or fall) or economic conditions (a cruise line may relocate a ship when it forecasts demand to be greater in another region). Instead of repositioning an empty ship, cruise lines operate repositioning cruises.

It is typical, for instance, for ships to spend the summer in Europe and the winter in the Caribbean, as a cold winter in Europe decreases the demand for seasonal cruising there.

In the past few years, cruise ships have also relocated to Dubai or Asia [1] as economic growth has increased the demand for cruising there.

Repositioning cruises are generally cheaper because most passengers will have to combine them with a one-way airline ticket.[2] Also, most passengers prefer port-intensive cruises (cruises which visit a lot of ports of call and have few days at sea), while some repositioning cruises are forced to spend many days at sea (when crossing the Atlantic Ocean for instance).

This lower cruise price is partially offset by greater revenue on board the ship. Passengers typically spend more on-board (casino, beverages and on-board shopping) during a day at sea than they do when visiting a port of call.[2]

Alternatively, these cruises can be used as an alternative to a one-way airline ticket,[3] for people who have the time (repositioning cruises usually last more than a week).

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.