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How to Get Cheap Drinks on a Cruise Ship

This article How to Get Cheap Drinks on a Cruise Ship was first published in June 2014 and is continually updated, most recently in July 2018.

We always love a good Drink while cruising. But as cocktails now average about $10 per drink on cruises, those poolside piña coladas will add up before you know it. Splurging every night on expensive drinks on a Cruise can be a great time, but it’ll break the bank before you can even say “mar-ga-rita.”

During the past five years that we’ve been using budget travel tactics to cruise all around the world, we’ve been figuring out ways to keep our bar bill extremely low while on cruise ships. As such, we’ve developed a variety of alcohol hacks and tips get cheap drinks on a cruise.

For example, during a 14-day sailing on the Celebrity Eclipse, we managed to keep our bar tab under $150 for the two of us. That’s less than $6 per day and we still drank quite well …and a lot! During a transatlantic repositioning cruise on Royal Caribbean’s Liberty of the Seas, we solely used our $100 onboard credit to drink throughout the cruise and we drank very well during the 13-day voyage.

While on a 13-day cruise on the Norwegian Star, we even drank for free the entire time! How did we pull that off? See tip #8 in this post. And during our latest cruise, sailing on the NCL Bliss, we didn’t drop a dime on alcohol and still drank heavily most nights. We’ll now divulge our best cheap drinks tips on a cruise!

Without further ado, here are 10 cruise tips & tricks for getting cheap alcohol while at sea. Let the party begin!

1) Cruise Ship Happy Hours

Many cruise lines offer a happy hour at certain bars, at certain times, with reduced priced drinks. Sometimes these happy hours are planned and stated in the daily newsletter. Other times they’ll be listed on the bar menus themselves. But often such drink deals are only subtly advertised. You must be observant and seek out these drink deals. Keep your eyes peeled for happy hour promotions on table-top signs.

And know that cruise happy hours may even be different from bar to bar. On the Celebrity Eclipse we found $3 draft beers and $4 wine pours at most bars during its happy hour, but this did not extend to every bar on the ship. Meanwhile, their martini bar had an entirely different happy hour with select martinis at half price. Yet the martini bar doesn’t honor the beer & wine happy hour. So be sure to check around all the bars and find a happy hour that is best for you!

During a sailing on Royal Caribbean Liberty of the Seas, we noticed that most bars actually do not have a happy hour at all. But the somewhat hidden On The Air Club had BOGO margaritas, daiquiris, and long island iced teas during their late afternoon happy hour that was exclusive to that bar only. No one ever seemed to venture there from 4:00-6:00, so usually we were the only ones there sipping on strong long island iced teas that came out to only $4. Now that’s a great bang for your buck!

Also, some cruises will have two happy hour periods: one before dinner and another into the late night. Celebrity Cruises does this dual happy hour, first from 4:00-6:00 and again at 10:00-midnight. If you can time your drinks right, you’ll be sipping on cocktails for about the same price as your local watering hole back home. Use other strategies listed here during the non-happy hour periods on the cruise.

And while most cruise happy hours are planned, some lines such as Carnival Cruises have been known to just announce drink deals spontaneously on party nights. Listen up and you may hear the DJ announce $1 beers! It’s happened to us before when sailing with Carnival.

Pro tip: Stock Up during the Best Drink Promos

If beer prices are slashed for happy hour or a promotion, consider ordering a round of unopened beers to stock up while prices are low. Then take them back to your cabin’s fridge, only to enjoy them poolside during the following day. Occasionally a bartender will insist on opening the beer. If that’s so, go with the 16 oz. aluminum bottles with twist off caps, since they can be easily resealed.

But often bartenders have no issue with passengers buying several unopened beers during a promotion. In fact, on a recent Holland America cruise when a 2-for-1 craft beer promotion came up, a bartender offered to send an entire case of discounted beers to our stateroom! We did. This brought the price-per-beer down to $2.98, which is even cheaper than buying these beers at a bar on land!

2) Attend Cruise Drink Tasting Events

Wine tastings, cocktail tastings, martini tastings, and even beer tastings can be some of the best drink deals at sea. Personally, it’s our favorite tip for cheap drinks on a cruise to partake in.

Specialty drinks like fine martinis typically cost $10 or more, plus gratuity. So five of such drinks would be priced at $50+. But when you attend a tasting event, you often get five full-sized drinks for $10-$25 per person. These events can be incredible booze bargains on a cruise. Plus you get to try a variety of different drinks you may have never thought to try before.

During some cruise tasting events that we’ve attended, the drinks are smaller portions coming in at about 4-6 ounces. Yet other events, we’ve been pleasantly surprised by full-sized drinks!

We’ve found tasting events on NCL (Norwegian Cruise Line) to be of particularly good value, as they’ve poured some large and strong drinks during their tastings. Norwegian usually does a martini tasting, margarita tasting, a beer tasting, and a wine tasting during their regular sailings. If you don’t want to drink all five drinks, consider attending with a partner/friend and sharing the experience.

These drink tasting events are a lot of fun and a great way to make friends during a cruise. We’ve learned some drink recipes that we now use back home. Keep an eye out for such tasting events in the daily itineraries. When you see them, jump on it and you may just discover your favorite new libation, all while being mindful of your drink budget.

Pro tip: If you ever cruise on the Norwegian Bliss, be sure to go the show “Happy Hour Prohibition – The Musical”. It costs $25, but that fee includes five prohibition-era cocktails throughout the entire performance. It’s great fun and great value!

3) Buy Alcohol in Bulk on a Cruise

Cruises want you to spend money on drinks and will reward you for your commitment to drinking more alcohol! Here are three ways to save on wine & beer, by buying in bulk.

i. Why to Never Order Wine By the Glass

Never ever order by the glass on a cruise, even if you’re only going to have one glass of wine with dinner. Here’s why: if you order a bottle of wine and don’t finish it, your server will gladly recork it for you so that you can enjoy the rest of that bottle on another night, at no additional charge. Also, most cruise ships even permit the server to send what’s left of the bottle to another bar or even to your stateroom.

As is the case with any land-based restaurant, wine by the bottle on cruise ships offers significant savings compared to ordering by the glass. So as long as you’re able to finish an entire bottle during the length of your entire cruise, there’s really no reason to ever order by the glass. Those $7 glasses of wine may seem like a good deal, but buying the whole bottle for $29 will ultimately get you more wine for less money.

ii. Wine Packages Can Really Save

Most all cruise lines offer wine packages in which you commit to a certain number of bottles throughout your sailing, at a reduced price. Typically the more bottles you commit to, the greater the price reduction. Try to estimate how much wine you’ll go through on the front end of the cruise which will lessen the blow to your onboard account by departure day.

You can often purchase these wine packages before you set sail which may provide even a little bit more of a discount. For example, Celebrity offers a Taste of the Vineyards package online with either 3, 5, or 7 bottles. The 3-bottle package starts at $109. Take a look online or ask your booking agent. Otherwise, once you’re on the ship, inquire about these wine packages at the ship’s wine bar.

If you’re going on a 7-day cruise and you think you may share one bottle of wine each night for dinner, then look for a 7-bottle wine package to save money on your wine bill.

iii. Beer Drinkers Should Buy Buckets of Beer to Save

Are you heading to the pool and want to kick back a few beers? Buy a bucket of five beers, which most cruises usually offer for the cost of four. It’s a win-win by saving your server a few trips to deliver your beer while saving you a few bucks. It may not be the best drink deal out on the high seas, but it still saves you that $6-$7 cost of a bottle of beer.

4) Order the Drink of the Day

Many cruise lines have a specialty “drink of the day” which will usually save you $1-$3 off the regular price. An additional bonus to the daily drink specials is that you may even get a souvenir cup which can entail even further discounts when getting a refill. The drink of the day is usually outlined in the daily cruise newsletter.

Waking up to find out the “daily drink” happens to be your favorite is like a Christmas morning surprise.

5) Bottle Service in Your Room is a Great Deal on a Cruise

The previous tip is great for a cheap bottle on the last cruise night, but what about the rest of the trip? Most cruise lines offer 1-liter bottles of liquor that they’ll send to your room. They’ll kindly set it all up nicely with glasses and ice for you to use throughout your cruise. The price of these liquor bottles with set-up ranges around $50-$60, depending on cruise line and your liquor preference.

While $50 for a bottle of liquor is much more than you’d pay for it at your local liquor store, the cost still comes out to being much less expensive than you would pay for several drinks at the bar on a cruise.

Let’s do the math. Consider that $50 would only buy you about 6 or so drinks at the bar. Meanwhile, a liter of liquor will yield over 20 drinks if using the same 1.5 oz. pour the bartenders are using. 20 drinks at the bar would cost you $150-$200! So purchasing a $50 liquor bottle sent to your stateroom will equate to a net savings of over $100! You’ve just lowered your drink price to $2.50 per cocktail ($50 bottle / 20 drinks = $2.50).

Additionally, most cruise lines aside from, Carnival and NCL, do permit you to bring your own soda on board. So you can use that as a mixer. So there’s absolutely no need to tap into the expensive minibar sodas.

6) Legally Bring Your Own Wine (and maybe beer)

Most cruise lines actually permit you to bring your own wine and champagne aboard the cruise ship. Usually, the wine allowance is one 750 ml bottles per person or two bottles per stateroom. This wine that you can legally bring aboard the cruise must be placed in your carry-on luggage only and is only limited to bringing on embarkation day.

Each cruise line’s wine allowance policy is slightly different. So we outlined the alcohol policies of the most popular cruise lines below. As these beverage policies do change, be sure to check the up-to-date policy directly with the cruise line, which we’ve linked to in the chart.

CruiseWine AllowancePolicy
Norwegian Not allowed. $15 per bottle.NCL Beverage Policy
Carnival 1 bottle per personCarnival Beverage Policy
Holland America 1 bottle per personHAL Brochure (see page 6)
Princess 1 bottle per personAlcohol Onboard Princess
Celebrity 2 bottles per stateroomCelebrity Alcohol Policy
Royal Caribbean 2 bottles per stateroomRCI Onboard Alcohol Policy
Disney 2 bottles per personCarrying Alcohol Onboard Disney

Pro Tip: How to Avoid the Corkage Fee in the Main Dining Room

You will be charged a corkage fee if pouring the wine you brought in the main dining room. These corkage fees vary by cruise line but typically range between $15-$25 per bottle.

Meanwhile, you can enjoy it from your cabin at no charge whatsoever. Your stateroom attendant will happily deliver wine glasses to your room and even an ice bucket to chill champagne.

But what if you want to have that glass of wine with your dinner without the expensive corkage fee? You can simply pour a glass in your cabin and enjoy anywhere else on the ship. It’s usually the same wine glasses used in the bars and dining room, so no one will know the difference. So fill up your glasses and take them to dinner with you, thereby avoiding a corkage fee. Often the maître d’ will even carry your glass of wine for you as you’re walked to your table. So go ahead and make it a big pour.

Pro Tip: How to Bring Beer Onboard Too!

If you’re beer drinkers like us, you may want to know how you can legally bring beer aboard with you instead of wine. A few cruise lines do permit you to bring your own beer onboard, although it is rare. Disney is one of the only major cruise lines that allow it in their official policy, permitting passengers to carry on six beers per person.

For cruise lines that allow you to bring wine, you can instead consider bringing a 750 ml bottle of craft beer on board. Such bottles often have the appearance of wine or champagne, so that has worked for us to bring a nice beer instead of an allowed wine bottle. (See image to the right: the bottle on the left is beer). It has always been allowed for us, even though beer is technically against the official alcohol policy.

Another way we get our own beer onboard is during port days. Bringing beer back onboard is almost never allowed officially, but we’ve found that security on many ships are willing to allow it. So we typically experiment with attempting to bring on a few cans, not trying to be sneaky and hide it. Sometimes it will be flagged by security and stored until the final night of the cruise. Other times, security allows the beer to be carried on. Note: We’ve had much better luck with having our beer allowed with cans rather than bottles.

7) Find the Cheap Drinks in Port

If you have an extra hour or two to burn while in port, skip the sugary overpriced drinks at Señor Frog’s and Fat Tuesday’s. Instead find a cozy local bar a little further away from the port to throw back a few. Not only will you have a more authentic experience and get some local flavor, but you also may find local prices!

You can have your Buds, Millers, Coors, Coronas, and Heinekens once you’re back on the ship. Instead, take the opportunity on shore to explore a local beer or spirit. We’ve found there to be some surprisingly tasty brews popping up all around the world. Many popular Caribbean and Central American cruise destinations even have local brewpubs near cruise ports.

Also, be aware that many places around the world don’t have open container laws like in the US. This means you can go into a local convenience store, and get a cold beer to enjoy while relaxing on the beach, touring the city streets, or simply walking back to the ship while you sip.

Many countries officially do have open container laws, but they are completely unenforced in popular cruise ports. If you Google to see if open containers are allowed the ports you’re traveling to, you may find some conflicting information. The best way to know whether drinking alcohol in public is tolerated is this: if the cashier of a convenience store has a bottle opener, then it is totally acceptable to drink in public. You may even be offered a cup! The best part is that all of these local beers while in port will be at a fraction of the cost compared to the cruise ship’s pricey drinks.

Pro Tip: Go On Inexpensive Shore Excursions that Include Booze!

Instead of necking a bottle of beer in the streets, book a tasting tour, a booze cruise, or an all-inclusive beach pass while in port. Use a tour agency independent from your cruise line save on shore excursions. We always use and recommend Viator shore excursions since they tend to be nearly half the cost of the cruise line’s excursions. Their ports of call tours also include a worry-free guarantee promise to get you back to the ship and if your cruise has to skip the port for any reason, they’ll provide a full refund.

Where are you cruising to? Here are just a few booze-filled shore excursions in some of the most popular Carribean cruise ports:

Cozumel, Mexico Drinking Excursions:

  • Mr. Sancho’s Beach Club is the hottest drink ticket on the island and is such incredible value! A mere $49 gets you an all-day pass to this white-sand beach resort that includes a full open bar with unlimited drinks! The day pass also includes a complete lunch menu, beach loungers, and even ocean kayaking! But best of all, there’s a swim-up bar, so you don’t even have to leave the pool to get your next margarita. Drink up!
    Beware: this regularly sells out in advance. Check availability now for your travel dates.
  • Catamaran Sail & Snorkel: After snorkeling on Cozumel’s reef, you’ll be treated to cervezas, rum punch, and even tequila shots as you sail around the island.
  • Jose Cuervo Tequila Tasting: While docked in this Mexican port, you can become a certified tequila connoisseur during a 3-tequila tasting, then learn how to make a margarita the authentic way!

Nassau, Bahamas Drinking Excursions:

  • Rum & Food Walking Tour is our top pick for Nassau, as it includes 6 rum tastings, 2 cocktails, and more. The distillery visit is interesting and the rum produced is so good that we bought a bottle! See latest reviews.
  • Nassau Beer Tasting & Food Tour samples some Bahamian beer favorites and visits the country’s first craft brewery, which takes in nine beer samples in total plus great local food like conch fritters.

Freeport, Bahamas Drinking Excursions:

  • Bahamian Brewery Tour: This $29 shore excursion may be the cheapest way to drink a lot while docked in the Bahamas. Why? Because the brewery is known to leave their taps open at the end of the brewery tour until you get your fill. More info.
  • Party Boat & Snorkel: This booze cruise in Freeport may not be cheap but it sure looks like an absolute blast and includes unlimited alcohol at the island BBQ and boat ride!

Cayman Islands Drinking Excursions:

  • Distillery & Brewery Tour Plus Beach: This is our top pick for the Cayman Islands, as this 4-hour tour packs in a distillery, rum factory, craft brewery, and even time on the famous Seven Mile beach. The tour includes loads of rum, vodka, and beer along the way and is only $37! You definitely won’t return to the ship sober. Book now.
  • Cayman Spirits Distillery Tour: At only $22, this may be the cheapest boozy shore excursion in the world!

St Thomas, US Virgin Islands Drinking Excursions

  • Rum Island Tasting Tour: This four-stop tour includes a daiquiri lesson while listening to pirate tales and drinking lots of the island’s signature Cruzan rum before ending up a local pub! It’s a bargain for St Thomas too, as this shore tour is usually listed for less than $50! Check prices.
  • Rum & Food Tour: This tour also explores St Thomas’s rum history, as it includes two rum drinks, but also puts focus on the island’s local food scene.

Saint Martin Drinking Excursions

  • Orient & Maho Beach: If you’re going to visit St Martin’s two most famous beaches, be sure to choose a tour that includes cold beer and delicious rum punch along the way. This one does and is only $40!
  • Topper Rhum Distillery Tour: After touring this famed distillery, you visit the tasting bar for unlimited rum samples and even the opportunity to bottle your own rum!

Other Boozy Shore Excursions Around the World

The above-listed shore excursions are only a few of the vast variety of excursions Viator has available on their tour booking site. You can find these boozy shore excursions all over the world, from a whale watching & brewery tour in Alaska to a vineyard excursion in Northern Italy. Search Viator excursions for your ports of call.

8) How To Get Cheap Booze Delivered to Your Cabin on the Final Night

At some point during your cruise, go to the duty-free liquor store onboard and buy a bottle. This tax-free liquor is well-priced and you may even catch an additional sale on alcohol from time to time. Unfortunately, the duty-free shop will not allow you to take those bottles back to your cabin …that is, until the last night. On the final afternoon of your cruise, any bottles that you purchased will be delivered directly to your stateroom.

Also on the final evening of your cruise, the duty-free store will, in fact, allow you to walk out of the shop with any liquor you purchase. On one cruise, we noticed that an entire liter bottle of vodka at the duty-free shop was actually priced less than two shots of the exact same vodka if you were to purchase it at the bar.

Additionally, any alcohol purchased while in port will also be delivered to your stateroom on the final day of your cruise. So don’t hesitate to buy that delicious Jamaican rum or snag that bottle of tequila while docked in Cozumel. When you return to the cruise ship, you can easily check the bottle with security. Then once the last night of your cruise rolls around, any bottles that you’ve purchased ashore will be delivered to your room.

So on your last night, have a party in your cabin and enjoy! Just be sure to schedule a late disembarkation the next day.

9) Unlimited Beverage Packages on Cruises

Many cruise lines now offer all-you-can-drink packages. These unlimited drink packages can seem expensive on the surface, but ultimately all-you-care-to-drink packages can actually be fantastic value if you tend to tip back a few while cruising. These unlimited beverage packages are a trend in the cruising industry that began about five years ago. Now Celebrity, Princess, Royal Caribbean, Holland America, most Norwegian ships, and many Carnival ships offer some sort of alcohol drink package.

Each drink package varies on the alcohol included, but most of these packages tend to be generous and even include top shelf liquors. Some of these drink packages also include specialty coffees, soft drinks, and other non-alcoholic drinks to help you recover the next day.

These cruise drink packages range in price from about $45-$90, per day. For example, Carnival currently promotes their CHEERS drink package for $51.95 per day + 15% gratuities. So a 7-day cruise, such a package would add up to a total of $418.20.

All of the different cruise lines’ beverage packages differ. Here is a comparison with prices for some the most popular cruise lines. Policies and prices do change, so be sure to confirm details before your cruise.

CruisePrice per night + GratuitiesInclusions & LimitsMore info:
Royal Caribbean $55 incl. gratuityUnlimited, drinks up to $12Deluxe Beverage Package
Holland America$45/$55 + 15%15 drinks per day, drinks up to $8/$15Login to HAL to view Signature / Elite
Celebrity$45/$55/$69 + 18%Unlimited, drinks up to $6/$9/$15Standard / Classic / Premium Packages
Carnival$51.95 + 15%15 drinks w/in 24 hrs, drinks up to $50Cheer Package
Princess$60 + 15%15 drinks per day, up to $12Premier Beverage Package
Norwegian$89 + 20%Unlimited, drinks up to $15Ultimate Beverage Package

Pro tip: Buy your beverage package online in advance. Most cruise lines offer a discounted rate, saving $5-$10 per day if you purchase the beverage package in advance. The prices listed above reflect the discounted beverage package rate. So buy online in advance of your cruise, or expect to pay a bit more.

Is the unlimited beverage package worth it?

That depends on how much you drink and the price of the beverage package. Do the math. If you think you will enjoy at least 6 drinks or so each day, cruise beverage packages will likely save you. It’s also nice to not have to be concerned about your growing bar tab on a cruise.

If you don’t think you’ll be drinking an average of six drinks per day, then usually the beverage package is not worth it. If drinking more than that, definitely consider buying one for your cruise. These beverage packages can pay for themselves even if you’re just having a few cocktails by the pool and a couple of glasses of wine with dinner. Six drinks in a day may seem excessive. But you’re in vacation mode and you’ll be surprised how quickly it all adds up. And if cruising is just one big party to you, the investment of a beverage package will pay dividends. Just drink responsibly and stay afloat!

Pro tip: Get a Cruise Beverage Package Included for Free!

Sometimes cruise lines will run special deals and offer these drink packages for free as an incentive for you to book the cruise. That is how we drank for free when we sailed on the Norwegian Star. It was fantastic! It was open bar the entire cruise and nearly the entire drink menu was included, even most top-shelf brands!

Also, there are a few cruise ships that are all-inclusive and even include unlimited alcohol. When we cruised on the Pullmantur Monarch, it included a full open bar during the two-week sailing. (Read our Pullmantur Review of a $159 Cruise). The Norwegian Sky is the only ship in NCL’s fleet that also includes open bar for all passengers, which even extends to free drinks on their private island! I’ve done the Bahamas sailing on the Sky and it was one big awesome party the entire cruise!

Search around the Internet to find cruise deals that include the unlimited beverage package. We’ve seen them offered by Norwegian and Celebrity the most. Call a good travel agent who can let you know which cruise lines may be currently running such a promotion.

10) BYOB – Bring Your Own Booze: The Sneaky Way

Passengers have been known to sneak their own booze aboard cruises. We like to play by the rules, but would be remiss not mention this strategy for cheap drinks on a cruise. There are often-tried cruise alcohol tricks like putting liquor in mouthwash containers and using green or blue food coloring in attempts to hide the fact that it’s really alcohol.

Such tricks are well-known and you won’t be fooling anyone by pouring some blue colored vodka into a Listerine bottle. If you are going to smuggle some liquor aboard your next sailing, your best bet is to buy one of the cruise ship flask kits that are specifically made for the purpose of being undetected when going through security. These nonmetallic pouches are purposely designed to let no air bubbles when pouring liquor into the devices, making it undetectable.

Many of these flasks have a nearly flawless track record of success. This Concealable and Reusable Cruise Flask Kit is currently the most popular alcohol smuggling device on Amazon and receives rave reviews. Check the most recent reviews.

So what happens if you get caught sneaking alcohol onto a cruise ship?

If you don’t buy a kit and hence get caught smuggling booze onto the cruise, typically security will just remove the liquor and may even offer to hold it for you until the end of the cruise. If you’ve just put a bottle of booze into your suitcase that security finds, the likely outcome is that they’ll hold it for you until the final night. But if you took sneaky tactics like putting alcohol in a mouthwash bottle, security will likely confiscate it completely.

Most cruise policies do indicate that you can be removed from the ship, but that never happens in practice. The biggest risk you run is receiving your bags late on the first night and having to do the walk-of-shame to get the “issue” straightened out.

Have Cheap Drinks on a Cruise but Don’t Miss Out on the Fun

Part of the fun of drinking on a cruise is the social element, hanging out the numerous bars, pubs, and clubs. The nightly parties can be a blast and drunken karaoke sessions can be hilarious. Yet some of these cruise tips for cheap drinks will confine you to drinking in your stateroom. That’s boring. You’re on a cruise – go out and have fun!

So be sure to utilize the happy hours, daily drink specials, tasting activities, and beverage package deals in order to truly make the most of your vacation, as you drink your way across the open seas!

Even More Ways to Save Before You Cruise

What’s better than inexpensive drinks on a cruise ship? It’s drinking for free on a cruise! It’s easy to get free champagne on a cruise. We do it all the time! We show you how in our next post in this series:

  • Read: 8 Proven Methods to Get FREE Drinks on a Cruise.

And here are a few more links to our other money-saving cruise blog posts and from our travel affiliate partners that you may find helpful:

  • Never go on an international cruise without travel insurance. Avoid having to shell out for medical emergencies, flight issues, trip cancelation, or lost baggage by getting a quick quote from RoamRight, which we’ve found to offer the best coverage for the price during our cruises.
  • If you need a hotel before or after your cruise, be sure to book early. All the best hotels in port cities tend to get reserved by cruise passengers in advance. We recommend using hotelscombined.com to compare all the top hotel sites and score the best deal before it’s too late.
  • Check our huge list of cruise tipsTop 50 Cruise Hacks to Save You Money, Hassle, WiFi and Weight Gain.
  • Lastly, to receive our latest travel tips and inspiration, as we continue this journey around the world, join us and the thousands of other drink-loving travelers over on our Roaming Around the World Page.

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The post How to Get Cheap Drinks on a Cruise Ship appeared first on Roaming Around the World.



This post first appeared on Roaming Around The World - Travel Blog With Tales, please read the originial post: here

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