MSC Cruises has been investing heavily in making its mark on the US cruise market. The company has moved more ships to American ports and wants to win market share from Royal Caribbean, Carnival, and Norwegian Cruise Line.

Part of its marketing appeal has been that unlike Carnival and Royal Caribbean, MSC Cruises offers cruise packages that include drinks and WiFi.

Related: Carnival Cruise Line quietly confirms major dining change

In many cases, the cruise line sells cabins that include a WiFi connection and its mid-tier beverage package. That allows passengers to order a selection of beers and wines as well as cocktails made with well liquor and lower-tier brands,.

Many MSC cruises, with alcohol and internet, are much better values than what’s being offered by Royal and Carnival. That has been a sales driver for the cruise line. 

Now, MSC has very quietly made a major change to its three alcoholic beverage package options that passengers are not going to like.

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MSC Cruises ships are full of novel bars.

Image source: MSC Cruises

MSC makes a Carnival-like change

When a Royal Caribbean passenger buys the cruise line’s Deluxe Beverage Package (DBP), they’re truly buying an all-you-can-drink package. There’s no limit on alcohol consumption as long as you remain in control.

The cruise line, of course, can shut people off or slow them down if they appear drunk, but if you can handle your alcohol, the DBP is truly unlimited.

Carnival Cruise Line’s Cheers package does not offer unlimited alcohol. It caps passengers at 15 alcoholic links per day. That’s the same number it caps a la carte passengers at. 

That’s a limit the cruise line has said is about passenger safety. Carnival gains some credibility on that statement since it won’t sell Cheers or non-Cheers passengers a drink once they hit the limit of 15.

MSC Cruises, which used to be truly unlimited, has added a Carnival-like 15-drink limit. The cruise line is making a major change that begins on April 1, 2025.    

“Effective for package purchases made after December 18, 2024, the changes include a new daily limit of 15 alcoholic beverages per person on all-inclusive packages, making the packages less inclusive and more restrictive,” CruiseHive reported.

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MSC may have dual motives

Like Carnival, MSC Cruises sells the change about passenger safety and creating the best possible onboard experience.

“There’ll be plenty of time to savor all our delicious cocktails, beers, wines, and spirits, while also promoting a healthy and balanced approach to indulgence, allowing us to maintain high-quality service whilst creating an enjoyable and responsible atmosphere for all our guests,” MSC shared in an email to passengers.

Unlike Carnival, however, once guests hit the 15-drink limit on an MSC cruise, they will still be allowed to purchase more alcohol.

The limit resets each day 15.

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Carnival passengers have complained for years that someone who drinks 15 beers might be spending $8-10 while a person who orders cocktails gets a much higher value for their purchase. Many have argued that the limit should either be dropped or at least changed to reflect what passengers are actually drinking.

Non-alcoholic drinks are not capped. Suite passengers still get unlimited alcohol as part of their package.

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