HomeNewsTrendsTravelWorld Tourism Day 2023: Should you take a cruise holiday on your next Mediterranean trip?

World Tourism Day 2023: Should you take a cruise holiday on your next Mediterranean trip?

While one often finds enough Indians on various cruise trips, the Cruise Lines Association revealed that just 201,000 Indians took a cruise vacation in 2022, compared to 11.9 million Americans. But the India numbers are growing. The key to picking your cruise holiday is pricing.

September 27, 2023 / 12:28 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
A beach on the cruise ship. (Image: Courtesy Norwegian Cruise Line)
A beach on the cruise ship. (Image: Courtesy Norwegian Cruise Line)

I’ve always thought of myself as a hyperactive traveller, constantly on the move when I’m at a new destination. Call it FOMO or just childlike curiosity but I rarely leave time in my travel schedules to lounge with a sundowner or hit the snooze button on my alarm. It’s why I never thought myself to be a candidate for a cruise holiday. I’ve always thought of cruise holidays as an option for slow, almost lazy travel. One cruise along Italy’s eastern and western coast changed all that. My home on the sea was the all-new Norwegian Viva, on her maiden voyage, a luxury cruise liner that might remind you of a massive Las Vegas-style hotel. Except, this ship had more activities and entertainment options than one of those mammoth hotels.

Are more Indians taking cruise holidays?

Story continues below Advertisement

A floating Norwegian Vega cruise hotel. (Photo: Ashwin Rajagopalan)

My first cruise was along India’s south-east coast, a short two-night cruise on Cordelia’s cruise liner that took me around the Bay of Bengal before heading back to Chennai. I noticed that the large Indian ‘joint family’ made up a significant chunk of the travellers on that cruise. It’s the same thing I noticed on the Norwegian Viva where quite a few families from the US, who typically live apart, come together for a family cruise vacation. You’d think cruise vacations would be a ‘no-brainer’ for Indian families where some older travellers (typically grandparents) can opt to stay on the ship while younger family members opt for day excursions at different ports of call. And yet the numbers released by the Cruise Lines Association revealed that just 201,000 Indians took a cruise vacation in 2022. The numbers from the US — 11.9 million, reveal a stark contrast. But the India numbers are growing; they registered a 64 per cent YOY growth over 2021. Domestic operators like Cordelia are also fuelling this growth.