Cruise Port Guides

Region, nearest airport, which cruise lines sail from each port, and typical itineraries. Port-level facts like terminal counts and parking rates are flagged "Not published" until independently verified.

US East Coast

US Gulf Coast

US West Coast

Caribbean

Frequently asked questions

What are the busiest cruise ports in the US?

The highest-volume US cruise ports are traditionally PortMiami (Miami, FL), Port Canaveral (Cape Canaveral, FL), and Port Everglades (Fort Lauderdale, FL), collectively anchoring most Caribbean and Bahamas sailings. Galveston is the largest Gulf Coast cruise port, and Long Beach and Seattle are the West Coast leaders.

Which airport should I fly into for each cruise port?

Each port guide lists the closest major airport and transit notes. PortMiami pairs with MIA, Port Canaveral pairs with MCO (Orlando), Port Everglades pairs with FLL, Galveston pairs with HOU or IAH, and Long Beach pairs with LGB, LAX, or SNA.

Is driving to a cruise port worth it over flying?

If you live within roughly an 8 to 12 hour drive, driving can save money vs. flying plus a hotel night vs. overnight airport hotel near the port. Port parking daily rates vary by port and are published on each port's official site. For longer trips or when flying is close to break-even, flying is usually the lower-hassle option.