Azamara, Celebrity and Royal Caribbean require passengers to be 18 or older to play in casinos, except for Alaska cruises (passengers must be 21 or older). Crystal, MSC Cruises, Princess, Seabourn, Silversea and Windstar restrict the casinos to travelers 21 and older. Gambling age is 18, except Alaska and Hawaii cruises, which are 21 due to state law. NCL: Drinking age 21. However, on most itineraries 18-20 can drink alcohol (for some itineraries, beer and wine only) if they are cruising with their parents and the parents sign a beverage waiver.
U.S. law applies in U.S. territorial waters, which extend 12 nautical miles from the shore. As the legal drinking age in the United States is 21, no cruise line permits passengers under 21 to drink while in U.S. territorial waters. In international waters, however, as well as those claimed by countries with lower drinking ages, some cruise lines allow passengers 18 and over to drink.
Parental PermissionGambling Age On Alaska Cruise
Azamara (azamaraclubcruises.com), Celebrity (celebritycruises.com) and Norwegian (ncl.com) allow guests 18 through 20 to drink with parental permission. The Azamara and Celebrity policies apply only to sailings that originate in Europe, Australia or South America, while Norwegian’s policy is in effect whenever the ship is in international waters except on Alaska and Hawaii itineraries. On all three lines, your parent or guardian must be on the ship with you and must appear in person to sign the waiver.
Location-Based Policies
Royal Caribbean (royalcaribbean.com), Costa (costacruise.com), Cunard (cunard.com) and MSC (msccruises.com) base their policies on local laws. Parental permission is not required for 18- through 20-year-olds to drink. Royal Caribbean’s drinking age is 18 for cruises that originate in Asia, Australia, New Zealand, Europe and South America, but the drinking age is always 21 on the company’s private islands. Costa’s drinking age is 18 for all sailings that depart from a non-United States port. Cunard’s drinking age is always 18 except when a ship is in U.S. territorial waters. MSC requires passengers to be 21 to drink on U.S. and Caribbean sailings, but 18 on all others.
Beer and Wine Only
Crystal Cruises (crystalcruises.com) allows passengers 18 through 20 to consume beer and wine when outside U.S. territorial waters. Guests must be 21 to consume hard liquor. Norwegian’s parental consent form extends only to beer and wine. Norwegian passengers under 21 may not consume liquor even with their parents’ permission.
Special Considerations
On some cruise lines, passengers 18 through 20 face alcohol restrictions that older passengers do not. For example, on Celebrity and Azamara, you are not allowed to provide alcoholic beverages to anyone else, even if that person is over 21. Read your cruise line’s policy carefully to ensure that you understand all the rules.
ReferencesAbout the AuthorGambling Age On Alaskan Cruise
Lisa Fritscher is a freelance writer specializing in disabled adventure travel. She spent 15 years working for Central Florida theme parks and frequently travels with her disabled father. Fritscher's work can be found in both print and online mediums, including VisualTravelTours.com. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in psychology from the University of South Florida.
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