It depends on what you want out of the trip. Royal Caribbean leans into scale: the Icon and Oasis class ships are built as floating resorts, with distinct onboard “neighborhoods,” multi-level waterparks, ice rinks, and structured kid programming. Carnival leans into energy: Fun Ship branding, casual evenings, shorter budget-friendly itineraries out of a wide US homeport network. Both are mainstream, both run formal (or “elegant”) evenings on longer sailings, and both sail extensively in the Caribbean and Bahamas.
If you want the biggest possible ship and the full neighborhood experience, Royal Caribbean is the answer, and Icon of the Seas is the current headline. If you want a lower entry price and a less formal onboard culture, Carnival is the answer, especially for 3-to-5-night sailings out of Florida, Galveston, or New Orleans.
At a glance
The spec table above pulls any numeric facts directly from our structured dataset. Where a value reads “Not published,” it means we have not independently verified that number against the line’s own page, so we do not guess. Always confirm final baggage policies, dress code frequency, and cabin square footage directly with the line before booking.
What does Royal Caribbean do better than Carnival?
Royal Caribbean wins on ship size, onboard neighborhood design, and its private island destination at CocoCay.
- Fleet scale. Royal operates Icon of the Seas (2024 launch, largest cruise ship in the world at debut), Wonder of the Seas, and the rest of the Oasis class. The onboard footprint is simply bigger than anything in Carnival’s fleet.
- Oasis class neighborhoods. Central Park, Boardwalk, and the AquaTheater neighborhoods give Oasis class ships a very different onboard feel from a typical cruise ship. It is genuinely a differentiator, not marketing copy.
- Perfect Day at CocoCay. Royal’s private Bahamas destination is widely considered the strongest private-island product in mainstream cruising, thanks to its waterpark, overwater cabanas, and beach-day structure.
What does Carnival do better than Royal Caribbean?
Carnival wins on price, US homeport accessibility, and a more casual, party-friendly onboard culture.
- Entry price. Carnival consistently prices below Royal Caribbean at equivalent cabin category and itinerary length, especially on short sailings. Exact pricing depends on sailing and date, so run fresh quotes, but the pattern is durable.
- US homeport breadth. Carnival sails from a wider range of US homeports than most competitors, which means more drive-to options for passengers who want to skip the flight. Galveston, Port Canaveral, New Orleans, Long Beach, and PortMiami are all in the rotation.
- Vibe. If you want a looser, livelier onboard culture with casual evenings and entertainment built around fun rather than polish, Carnival is the explicit brand promise.
Where are Royal Caribbean and Carnival roughly equal?
Both lines sail similar Caribbean routes, run dress-up evenings on longer sailings, and offer structured kids programming.
- Caribbean and Bahamas itineraries. Both lines sail the core Caribbean routes. If you care about a specific island, check both lines’ schedules.
- Formal nights on longer sailings. Both designate dress-up evenings, with specific frequency varying by itinerary. If you are packing for a 7-night sailing, plan on at least one dressier evening on either line and confirm the count with your exact itinerary.
- Kids and family programming. Both lines run structured kids programming across age bands. Royal’s is bigger in raw square footage. Carnival’s leans more casual.
Which one should you book?
- Book Royal Caribbean if you want the biggest possible ship, the onboard neighborhoods of Oasis or Icon class, or Perfect Day at CocoCay as a headline destination.
- Book Carnival if you want the lower entry price, prefer sailing out of a non-Miami US homeport, or want a looser Fun Ship onboard culture.
- Book neither if Disney IP is the reason you are cruising. Disney Cruise Line prices higher but owns that specific experience. See the Disney Cruise Line guide for context.
What still needs verification before you book
Policies change without notice. Before you book, independently confirm:
- Current baggage allowance (pieces, weight limit) on both lines’ luggage pages.
- Specific formal night frequency for your exact itinerary length.
- Actual cabin square footage for the exact ship and cabin category you are booking (our tool flags “Not published” until each ship’s stateroom page is reviewed).
- Up-to-date fees for drink packages, Wi-Fi, and specialty dining on both lines, which change regularly.
Bottom line
Royal Caribbean wins on scale. Carnival wins on price and accessibility. Both are mainstream and both run the same core Caribbean itineraries. Pick the one whose brand promise matches how you actually want to spend the week.