Disney Fantasy Cruise Ship Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before You Sail

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Disney Fantasy Cruise Ship Guide - Magic in the Planning

By Alyssa Howard

The Disney Fantasy holds a genuinely special place in my family’s story. It was the first Disney cruise ship my daughters ever sailed on, and everything about that trip was magic from the moment we walked up the gangway. My husband and I, and our girls who were five and six at the time, spent seven days sailing the Western Caribbean together, visiting George Town in Grand Cayman, Falmouth in Jamaica, Cozumel in Mexico, and Castaway Cay. We stayed in a deluxe family oceanview stateroom, and it was perfectly suited to our little family of four. Our daughters were treated like princesses at every turn. It was one of those trips that stays with you.

This Disney Fantasy cruise ship guide covers everything you need to know before you sail: the ship’s history and design, dining, entertainment, staterooms, the deck layout, itineraries, and the insider tips that will make your time on board as magical as possible.


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Planning to sail on Disney Cruise Line? Be sure to check out our guide to all that Disney Cruise Line has to offer, including itineraries, themed events at sea, and more!


 

Disney Fantasy: Quick Facts at a Glance

Here is a snapshot of the basics before we dive in.

  • Launched: March 31, 2012
  • Ship class: Dream class (sister ship to Disney Dream)
  • Design style: Art Nouveau-inspired with modern luxury touches
  • Length: 1,115 feet (340 meters)
  • Gross tonnage: 129,690
  • Passenger capacity: Up to 3,500 guests (2,500 lower berths)
  • Staterooms: 1,250
  • Crew: approximately 1,458
  • Number of decks: 14
  • Pools: 3 (including an adults-only pool)
  • Specialty dining: Palo and Remy (both adults-only)
  • Home port: Port Canaveral, FL

Bottom Line: The Disney Fantasy is the sister ship to the Disney Dream and one of the two largest ships in Disney’s classic fleet. It has everything families love about Disney Cruise Line, with the added bonus of ship-exclusive entertainment, two adults-only specialty restaurants, and consistent year-round sailings from Port Canaveral that make it one of the most accessible ships in the fleet for East Coast and Florida guests.

 

Ship History and Design

Disney Fantasy on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Disney Fantasy launched on March 31, 2012, as the second ship of the Dream class and the fourth vessel in the Disney Cruise Line fleet. She was built by Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany, the same shipyard that built her sister the Disney Dream the previous year, and represents a continuation of the design philosophy that made the Dream so beloved.

From the outside, the Fantasy shares the same silhouette as the Dream: the iconic navy-blue hull, twin red funnels stamped with Mickey Mouse ears, and sweeping ocean liner lines that feel classic rather than contemporary. She is a beautiful ship to see in port, and Dumbo appears on her stern, painted mid-air with a can of paint in his trunk and his signature ears spread wide, a detail that delights guests of all ages when the ship docks.

Inside, the Fantasy brings the same Art Nouveau-inspired design as the Dream, with a grand three-story atrium lobby, sweeping staircase, and ornate detailing throughout the ironwork and glass. The atrium statue is of Minnie Mouse in vintage 1920s fashion, holding a parasol and standing beside steamer luggage, a warm and elegant welcome that sets the tone for the ship’s classic-meets-magical atmosphere.

Where the Fantasy distinguishes itself from the Dream is in its ship-exclusive restaurants, stage shows, and themed events. The Fantasy has its own unique identity within the Dream class, and those differences are meaningful for guests who are deciding between the two.

Pro Tip: The Disney Fantasy and her sister, the Disney Dream, share the same layout and most of the same venues. If you have sailed the Dream, you will feel immediately at home on the Fantasy. The key differences are in the ship-exclusive dining venues and the stage show lineup.

 

Disney Fantasy Deck Layout

View from the Deck on the Disney Fantasy on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Fantasy’s 14 decks take a bit longer to learn than the 11-deck Magic-class ships, but the layout is logical and most guests have it figured out within a day or two at sea.

  • Deck 1: Health Center, Tender Lobby
  • Deck 2: Enchanted Garden, staterooms
  • Deck 3: Royal Court, Animator’s Palate, adult district (The Tube nightclub, 687 Ocean Club bar, Pink lounge, Ooh La La champagne bar), main lobby atrium, Guest Services, D Lounge
  • Deck 4: Walt Disney Theatre, Mickey’s Mainsail shop, Preludes snack bar
  • Deck 5: Oceaneer Club, Oceaneer Lab, It’s a Small World Nursery, Buena Vista Theater, staterooms
  • Decks 6–11: Staterooms
  • Deck 11: Senses Spa and Salon, fitness center, Quiet Cove adult pool and hot tubs, Cove Cafe, Vanellope’s Sweets and Treats
  • Deck 12: Palo, Remy, Cabanas buffet, Concierge Lounge, staterooms
  • Deck 13: AquaDuck watercoaster loading area, Flo’s Cafe quick service (Luigi’s Pizza, Tow Mater’s Grill, Filmore’s Favorites, Ramone’s Cantina), Mickey’s Pool, Nemo’s Reef splash area, Eye Scream soft serve
  • Deck 14: Goofy’s Sports Deck, Twist ‘n’ Spout slide, upper AquaDuck track

Pro Tip: Use the stairs over the elevators, especially during peak times like embarkation day and right after dinner. On the Fantasy, the stairwells are genuinely beautiful, with Art Nouveau detailing that carries through all 14 decks. It is one of those things that makes getting from point A to point B feel like part of the experience.

 

Dining on the Disney Fantasy

Dining is one of the things Disney Cruise Line consistently gets right, and the Fantasy is a strong example of why. The rotational dining system sits at the heart of the experience, and it delivers in a way that sounds simple but becomes genuinely special in practice.

Having experienced the rotational dining system firsthand on this ship with my family, I can tell you that the detail that makes it work is the servers rotating with you. You share your dietary needs, your kids’ quirks, and any special occasions on night one, and your server team carries that through every dinner for the rest of the cruise. By our third night, our daughters’ preferences were already anticipated before they were asked. It is a small thing that adds up to a warm, personal experience.

Rotational Dining: The Three Main Restaurants

The Fantasy rotates guests through three main dining rooms: Animator’s Palate, Royal Court, and Enchanted Garden.

Animator’s Palate

Animator’s Palate is the fleet’s signature dining experience, and the Fantasy’s version is a particular favorite among guests who have dined at this restaurant across multiple ships. The room transforms throughout dinner as animated sequences fill the walls, and the Fantasy’s version features the beloved Undersea Magic dinner show where Crush from Finding Nemo interacts with guests by name via animated screens. It is theatrical, genuinely fun, and the food is well-executed. The dinner shows here are worth paying attention to rather than treating as background entertainment.

Royal Court

Royal Court is the Fantasy’s most elegant rotational dining room, and it is exclusive to this ship. Inspired by the classic Disney princess films, the room is pure fairytale elegance: high ceilings, sweeping chandeliers, soft golden lighting, and hand-painted portraits of Disney princesses on the walls. The menu is French-inspired and refined, making this the most traditionally formal of the three rotational restaurants. It is a genuinely beautiful space that photographs as well as it dines, and it opens for sit-down breakfast and lunch on most days, making it a lovely alternative to the buffet when you want a slower morning.

On our family sailing, our daughters were absolutely enchanted by Royal Court. If you are traveling with little ones who love the Disney princesses, this room will mean everything to them.

Enchanted Garden

Enchanted Garden is one of the most beautiful dining rooms in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet, and it is exclusive to the Fantasy and the Dream. Inspired by the Gardens of Versailles, the room transitions from daytime to evening throughout dinner, with lighting effects shifting across a ceiling of cascading floral arrangements and a large fountain at the center of the space. It is theatrical without being loud, and the menu features lighter, garden-inspired dishes alongside heartier options. It also opens for buffet breakfast, making it a serene morning alternative to Cabanas.

Palo

Palo is the adults-only Italian specialty restaurant on Deck 12, and it is consistently one of the best dining experiences at sea across the fleet. Venice-inspired decor, Northern Italian cuisine, and exceptional service. Book it the moment your online check-in window opens, because dinner reservations go fast. The brunch option on sea days is exceptional and often slightly easier to book if dinner is full. There is an additional surcharge, but for a special occasion or a couple’s night out, it is absolutely worth it.

Remy

Remy is exclusive to the Disney Fantasy and the Disney Dream, and it is one of the most distinctive dining experiences in the entire fleet. Named after the hero of Pixar’s Ratatouille, it is a true fine dining restaurant with menus created in collaboration with Michelin-starred chefs, presented in a stunning Parisian-themed setting. The prix-fixe dinner is multi-course, wine-pairable, and priced accordingly (the cover charge is the highest in the fleet), but it is genuinely worth it for a special occasion.

On sailings of four nights or longer, Remy also offers a champagne brunch and a dessert-only experience called Petites Assiettes de Remy. If you are sailing the Fantasy and you love food, Remy is one of the strongest reasons to choose this ship specifically.

Flo’s Cafe and Quick Service

The pool deck quick-service area is themed around Pixar’s Cars and called Flo’s Cafe, with four stalls: Luigi’s Pizza, Tow Mater’s Grill (burgers, hot dogs, chicken tenders), Filmore’s Favorites (sandwiches, salads, wraps), and Ramone’s Cantina (build-your-own tacos and bowls). Eye Scream for soft-serve is nearby on the same deck. On embarkation day, heading straight to Flo’s Cafe instead of the Cabanas buffet is one of the best tips I can give you: shorter lines, faster service, and you can eat while the ship sails away from port.

Room service is available 24 hours a day and included in your fare. The hang-tag breakfast card and the standard menu of sandwiches, burgers, pizza, and snacks make it a reliable go-to throughout the cruise.

Bottom Line: Dining on the Disney Fantasy is a genuine highlight of the sailing experience. Royal Court is the ship-exclusive standout for its princess-themed elegance, Remy is the must-book for food lovers, and Enchanted Garden is one of the most beautiful rooms you will ever eat dinner in. Book Remy and Palo the moment your check-in window opens.

 

Entertainment on the Disney Fantasy

The Fantasy’s entertainment lineup is strong and includes one of the most beloved stage productions in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet.

Walt Disney Theatre

The Fantasy’s Broadway-style productions are Disney’s Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular, Disney Wishes, and Disney’s Believe. All three are scheduled around your dining rotation so you experience both dinner and a show each evening.

Disney’s Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular is the Fantasy’s crown jewel and one of the most celebrated stage productions in the fleet. The show made its at-sea debut on the Fantasy in 2012 and has been a guest favorite ever since. It is a full theatrical retelling of the animated film, with elaborate staging, flying sequences that send Aladdin soaring over the audience, a scene-stealing Genie, and production values that rival professional Broadway. On our family sailing, our daughters were completely captivated, and the flying sequence genuinely made the whole theater gasp. If you are seeing one show, make it this one.

Disney Wishes is a heartfelt, compilation-style show that follows the theme of wishes and dreams across the Disney universe, with beloved songs from classic films woven into an emotionally resonant production. It is a beautiful complement to Aladdin and lands particularly well with families.

Disney’s Believe follows a workaholic scientist father and his daughter on her birthday, with the Genie as the magical catalyst who helps him rediscover wonder. It features songs from across the Disney catalog and is described by many guests as unexpectedly emotional. A strong third entry in the rotation.

Buena Vista Theater

The Buena Vista Theater on Deck 5 screens first-run Disney and Pixar films in a proper movie theater setting, with popcorn and included in your fare. A great option for a midday break on sea days, and our daughters loved having a proper movie theater experience on board.

AquaDuck

The AquaDuck is a water coaster that uses water jets to propel riders through a clear tube that wraps around the upper decks and extends out over the ocean, where a transparent section lets you look straight down to the water far below. It was the first water coaster ever installed on a cruise ship when the Dream class launched, and it remains one of the most popular features on the ship. The best strategy is to ride it during the sailing-away party on embarkation day, when it typically opens and the lines are short, or on port days when most guests are ashore.

Character Experiences and Pirate Night

Character meet-and-greets happen daily and are listed in the Navigator app. Pirate Night is one of the highlights of most sailings, with a deck party, fireworks (on most itineraries), and the whole ship committed to the theme. Many guests dress up, which adds considerably to the atmosphere. On our Western Caribbean sailing, Pirate Night was one of our daughters’ favorite memories from the entire trip.

Pixar Day at Sea (Select Sailings)

This is the Fantasy’s signature themed event and one of the most exciting things about booking this ship specifically. Pixar Day at Sea is a full-day immersive experience layered on top of the regular sailing, with Pixar character meet-and-greets (including characters you may not find at any Disney park), a pool party with Crush from Finding Nemo, a fashion show hosted by Edna Mode, a Toy Story-themed breakfast, a nighttime deck party, and ship-wide Pixar theming throughout. It runs on select 5-night Bahamian sailings from Port Canaveral in early 2026 and returns again in 2027. If Pixar is important to your family, booking a Pixar Day at Sea sailing is absolutely worth it.

Kids and Teen Programming

The youth clubs on the Fantasy follow the same exceptional model as the rest of the fleet.

  • Oceaneer Club and Oceaneer Lab (ages 3–12): Themed spaces with organized activities, character interactions, STEM programming, and supervised drop-off care. On our sailing, our daughters spent so much time in the Oceaneer Club that we had to convince them to come back and join us for dinner.
  • It’s a Small World Nursery (ages 6 months–3 years): Staffed nursery care available for an additional fee.
  • Edge (ages 11–14): Dedicated tween lounge with its own programming and social atmosphere.
  • Vibe (ages 14–17): Teen club with enough independence and programming that older kids genuinely want to be there.

 

Staterooms on the Disney Fantasy

The Fantasy’s staterooms are generous by cruise ship standards and designed with families squarely in mind, which we experienced firsthand in our deluxe family oceanview stateroom. It was exactly the right size for our family of four, and the layout made life with two young kids aboard a ship genuinely manageable.

Room Categories

  • Inside Staterooms: Starting at 169 square feet, sleeping up to four guests with a queen bed or two twin beds, a convertible sofa, and some rooms with an additional wall pull-down berth. Compact but functional, especially given the split bathroom setup.
  • Oceanview Staterooms: Same layout with a porthole window. A comfortable step up from inside at a modest price increase.
  • Deluxe Family Oceanview with Verandah: The most popular category, with a private balcony. If you can swing a verandah, do it. Waking up on your private balcony as the ship approaches a new port is one of the defining pleasures of a Disney cruise.
  • Concierge Staterooms and Suites: The top tier, with one- and two-bedroom suites, private verandahs, and access to the dedicated Concierge Lounge on Deck 12. Concierge guests receive priority boarding, dedicated staff, and pre-dinner cocktails and appetizers in the lounge each evening. The one-bedroom suite tops out around 622 square feet; the Royal Suite is the ship’s largest at over 1,700 square feet.

The Split Bathroom

If you have never sailed Disney before, this is the detail that surprises first-timers most and becomes one of the things they talk about most afterward. The standard staterooms have a split bathroom configuration, with the toilet and sink in one room and the tub, shower, and second sink in another. For a family of four sharing a room and trying to get everyone ready in the morning, this is a genuine game-changer. We used both sides of the bathroom simultaneously every morning and could not imagine going back.

All staterooms include a refrigerator, in-room safe, hair dryer, and under-bed luggage storage. Families with infants can request complimentary bottle warmers, infant tubs, and diaper disposal units from their stateroom host.

Pro Tip: If you are sailing with young children, an oceanview or verandah stateroom gives you natural light to gauge the time of day, which matters more than you might expect when little ones are on an irregular sleep schedule. Our oceanview stateroom was perfect for our family and one of the things I would do the same way again.

 

Adults-Only Spaces on the Disney Fantasy

Coffee on the Disney Fantasy on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Fantasy’s adults-only spaces are well-developed, and the combination of two specialty restaurants, the Quiet Cove pool, Cove Cafe, and the Senses Spa makes it an excellent ship for couples or adults looking for a proper retreat within a family-friendly cruise.

  • Quiet Cove Pool (Deck 11): The adults-only pool with adjacent hot tubs, a poolside bar, and a notably calmer atmosphere than the main pool deck above. On a sunny sea day, this is the spot to be.
  • Cove Cafe (Deck 11): Adjacent to Quiet Cove, serving specialty coffee drinks, light bites, and cocktails with a relaxed lounge feel. One of the best spots on the ship for a slow morning.
  • Palo (Deck 12): The adults-only Italian specialty restaurant. See the dining section above.
  • Remy (Deck 12): The adults-only fine dining restaurant, exclusive to the Fantasy and Dream. See the dining section above.
  • Senses Spa and Salon (Deck 11): Full-service spa, salon, barbershop, and fitness center. The Rainforest Room (steam rooms, saunas, scented showers, heated loungers with ocean views) is available by day pass or voyage pass and is worth every dollar on a sea day.
  • Adult District (Deck 3): The Tube (nightclub), 687 Ocean Club (bar with ocean views), Pink (champagne and cocktail lounge), and Ooh La La (champagne bar). These come alive in the evenings with trivia, themed parties, dancing, and live music.

Bottom Line: The adult experience on the Fantasy is one of the strongest in the fleet, thanks especially to the combination of Remy, Palo, Quiet Cove, and a full Deck 3 adult district. Even on a family-focused sailing, there is genuinely excellent adult space here.

 

Disney Fantasy Itineraries: Where Does It Go?

View from the Deck on the Disney Fantasy on Disney Cruise Line | Magic in the Planning

The Fantasy is one of the most consistently deployed ships in the fleet, sailing year-round from Port Canaveral, Florida. This makes it one of the most accessible Disney cruise options for families on the East Coast and anyone adding a cruise to a Walt Disney World vacation.

Year-Round: Bahamian and Caribbean from Port Canaveral

The Fantasy’s schedule is built around 3-, 4-, and 5-night Bahamian sailings and 5-night Western Caribbean itineraries from Port Canaveral, with the occasional 7-night and 10-night extended sailings woven in throughout the year. Bahamian itineraries typically include stops at Nassau and one or both of Disney’s private island destinations, Castaway Cay and Disney Lookout Cay at Lighthouse Point. Western Caribbean itineraries include ports such as Cozumel, Mexico, and Grand Cayman. On our family sailing we did the full 7-night Western Caribbean, which also included Falmouth, Jamaica, and it was an extraordinary week.

Pixar Day at Sea (Select 5-Night Sailings)

Pixar Day at Sea runs on select 5-night Bahamian sailings from Port Canaveral and is one of the most compelling reasons to choose a specific Fantasy sailing date over another. In 2026, Pixar Day at Sea sailings departed in January, February, and early March. For 2027, Pixar Day at Sea continues on select 5-night sailings from Port Canaveral throughout the year. If this experience is important to your family, check the specific sailing dates carefully before booking, as it does not run on every departure.

10-Night Southern Caribbean (Select Sailings)

For guests who want a more extended Caribbean adventure, the Fantasy offers select 10-night Southern Caribbean sailings from Port Canaveral. These longer itineraries reach destinations like St. Maarten, St. Lucia, Antigua, and San Juan, Puerto Rico, alongside stops at Castaway Cay and Disney Lookout Cay. They are some of the most destination-rich sailings in the Fantasy’s schedule and appeal to experienced Disney cruisers looking for something beyond the standard Bahamian route.

Holiday and Themed Sailings

Halloween on the High Seas sailings in October and Very Merrytime Christmas cruises in November and December add seasonal character experiences, special entertainment, and themed decor throughout the ship. These tend to sell out well in advance.

Pro Tip: Port Canaveral is ideally situated for families combining a Disney cruise with a Walt Disney World vacation. Many families do several days at the parks before or after their sailing, and Disney transportation options between the parks and the port make the logistics straightforward. If this is your plan, booking your cruise and park days together as a package is worth exploring.

 

The Disney Fantasy vs. the Disney Dream

Since the Fantasy and Dream are sister ships, this is one of the most common questions guests ask when deciding between the two. Here is the honest answer: they are very nearly the same ship, and if you have sailed one, you know roughly what to expect from the other.

The structural layout, stateroom sizes, split bathroom design, AquaDuck, kids’ clubs, Quiet Cove pool, Cove Cafe, Senses Spa, adult district, Palo, and Remy are all identical across both ships. The experience of being on board feels the same.

The meaningful differences are in the ship-exclusive restaurants and stage shows. The Fantasy has Royal Court (its equivalent of the Dream’s Royal Palace), and the shows are different: the Fantasy has Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular and Disney Wishes, while the Dream has Beauty and the Beast and The Golden Mickeys. Both lineups are excellent, but they are genuinely different experiences.

The other practical difference is home port. The Fantasy sails year-round from Port Canaveral, while the Dream home-ports in Fort Lauderdale for most of its schedule. If you are driving from Central Florida or adding a cruise to a Disney World trip, the Fantasy is the natural choice.

 

Insider Tips for First-Time Disney Fantasy Sailors

  • Book Remy and Palo the moment your check-in window opens. Both fill up fast, especially Remy dinner. If Remy dinner is gone, the champagne brunch and Petites Assiettes de Remy options on longer sailings may still be available. Even brunch at Palo is worth booking.
  • If Pixar Day at Sea is on your sailing, treat it like a park day. Character meet-and-greets fill up quickly and the deck party draws a big crowd. Check the Navigator app the morning of and prioritize the experiences that matter most to your family. The Edna Mode fashion show and the Crush pool party are particular highlights.
  • Ride the AquaDuck during the sailing-away party. It typically opens right as you leave Port Canaveral, and the line is essentially nonexistent for the first hour while everyone else is at the deck party or getting settled. Ride it several times before the crowds hit.
  • Do not skip Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular. It is genuinely one of the best stage productions in the fleet. The flying sequences alone are worth the ticket.
  • Tell your rotational dining server everything on night one. Dietary restrictions, allergies, preferences, your children’s favorites, and any celebrations. They will remember and use it every night for the rest of the cruise.
  • Use Royal Court for breakfast. The sit-down breakfast at Royal Court is a calm, beautiful alternative to the Cabanas buffet, and on a ship with princess-loving little ones, sitting down to breakfast in that room is a memory in itself.
  • Claim your Quiet Cove pool chairs early on sea days. The adults-only pool area fills up quickly. Get there within the first hour of the pool deck opening if you want a good spot.
  • Download the Navigator app before you board. It is your daily guide to dining times, character appearances, show schedules, and port information, and you can message your travel party through it without paying for ship Wi-Fi.
  • Skip Cabanas on embarkation day. Head to Flo’s Cafe on Deck 13 instead. Faster, less crowded, and you can eat while the ship gets underway.
  • Look for the hidden Mickeys. They are woven throughout the ship in the carpets, railings, artwork, and ironwork. With young kids on board, turning it into a game makes exploring the ship even more fun.

 

Is the Disney Fantasy Right for Your Family?

Beautiful Views on Disney's Castaway Cay | Magic in the Planning

The Disney Fantasy is a great fit if you:

  • Are sailing from Port Canaveral or Central Florida (the Fantasy is the natural choice for anyone near Orlando or adding a cruise to a Disney World trip)
  • Are traveling with young children (the ship’s family amenities, princess-themed Royal Court, and Oceaneer Club are exceptional for little ones)
  • Want Pixar Day at Sea, which returns to the Fantasy on select sailings in 2026 and 2027
  • Love Aladdin and want to see the Fantasy-exclusive stage production, one of the best in the fleet
  • Want Remy, the exclusive fine dining restaurant shared with the Dream
  • Are looking for a first Disney cruise that offers flexible sailing lengths (3, 4, 5, or 10 nights) from a convenient home port

You might want to consider a different ship if you:

  • Are departing from Fort Lauderdale or the Gulf Coast (the Dream, Magic, or Destiny may be more convenient)
  • Want the newest technology and theming in the fleet (the Wish, Treasure, or Destiny offer more of that)
  • Are specifically looking for Tiana’s Place (Wonder exclusive), Tangled: The Musical (Magic exclusive), or Beauty and the Beast (Dream exclusive)
  • Want a European or Alaska itinerary (the Fantasy stays in the Caribbean year-round)

Bottom Line: The Disney Fantasy is where my family’s Disney cruise story began, and I could not have chosen a better ship for it. Everything about that first sailing, from Royal Court to Aladdin on stage to watching our daughters run into the Oceaneer Club every morning, set the standard for what a Disney cruise could be. The Fantasy is a beautifully balanced ship that works for families with young children, couples seeking a luxury escape within a family vacation, and first-time Disney cruisers looking for the full experience. If you are sailing from Port Canaveral or adding a cruise to a Disney World trip, this is your ship.

 

Disney Cruise Line Planning Resources

Ready to start planning your Disney Fantasy cruise? Here are some of our most popular guides to help you get started!

The Complete Guide to Planning a Disney Cruise
Everything you need to know about booking, preparing for, and making the most of a Disney Cruise Line vacation, from choosing your ship and itinerary to what to pack and what to expect on board.
Read the full guide

The Ultimate Disney Cruise Line Dining Guide
A comprehensive look at dining across the Disney Cruise Line fleet, including how rotational dining works, what to expect at specialty restaurants like Palo and Remy, and tips for making the most of every meal at sea.
Read the full guide

Disney Dream Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Dream, including its exclusive Remy fine dining restaurant, the AquaDuck water coaster, the stunning Enchanted Garden dining room, and what makes this ship one of the best in the fleet for couples and families alike.
Read the full guide

Disney Magic Cruise Ship Guide
Everything you need to know about the Disney Magic, including ship-exclusive dining at Lumiere’s, the Broadway-caliber Tangled: The Musical, the 2023 refurbishment updates, and what makes the original Disney cruise ship still one of the best in the fleet.
Read the full guide

Disney Wonder Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Wonder, including its exclusive Tiana’s Place restaurant, entertainment lineup, staterooms, Alaska itineraries, and what makes this classic intimate ship such a beloved choice for Disney cruisers.
Read the full guide

 

Looking to plan your Disney Cruise Line vacation? Be sure to visit my resource library for printable guides and planning worksheets!

And be sure to visit the official website for Disney Cruise Line for more information about all they have to offer!

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