Disney Destiny Cruise Ship Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before You Sail
The Disney Destiny is the boldest ship Disney Cruise Line has ever built, and that is saying something given what came before it. As the third Wish-class vessel and the seventh ship in the fleet, the Destiny takes the immersive framework of the Wish and Treasure and pushes it somewhere entirely new: a heroes and villains theme that runs through every dining room, every lounge, every character encounter, and every corner of the ship. Loki declaring himself ruler in the Grand Hall. Cruella de Vil holding court in her own piano lounge. A five-headed Hydra battling Hercules on the stage of the Walt Disney Theatre. This is not a subtle ship.
This Disney Destiny cruise ship guide covers everything you need to know before you sail: the ship’s design and theme, dining, entertainment, staterooms, the deck layout, itineraries, and the insider tips that will make your sailing as magical and dramatic as the ship deserves.
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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 Destiny: Quick Facts at a Glance
Here is a snapshot of the basics before we dive in.
- Launched: November 20, 2025
- Ship class: Wish class (third Wish-class ship, sister to the Wish and Treasure)
- Theme: Heroes and villains from across the Disney universe
- Length: 1,119 feet (341 meters)
- Gross tonnage: 144,000
- Passenger capacity: Up to 4,000 guests (2,500 lower berths)
- Number of decks: 15
- Specialty dining: Palo Steakhouse and Enchanté (both adults-only)
- Fuel: Liquefied natural gas (LNG)
- Home port: Port Everglades (Fort Lauderdale), FL
Bottom Line: The Disney Destiny is the most dramatically themed ship in the Disney Cruise Line fleet, built around the idea that heroes and villains make every story worth telling. If you loved the Wish or Treasure, the Destiny will feel familiar in layout but entirely different in personality. It is theatrical, bold, and unlike anything else in the fleet.
Ship History and Design

The Disney Destiny made her maiden voyage on November 20, 2025, becoming the seventh ship in the Disney Cruise Line fleet and the third vessel in the Wish class. She was built by Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany, the same shipyard as the Wish and Treasure, and shares the same fundamental layout, scale, and architecture as her sisters. But where the Wish is a fairy tale and the Treasure is an adventure, the Destiny is a confrontation between light and darkness, heroes and villains, good and evil.
The design theme is “Heroes and Villains,” drawing on some of Disney’s most iconic stories to create a ship where the tension between heroism and villainy plays out in every space. The color palette is deeper and more dramatic than either sister ship, with richer tones that shift between the warm golds of heroism and the cool blues and purples of villainy throughout the ship.
The Grand Hall makes the theme clear from the very first step aboard. Inspired by Black Panther and the world of Wakanda, it is the most dramatic Grand Hall in the Wish class, with vibranium-influenced design, a Loki-shaped narrative woven into the space (he declares himself ruler of the ship in a recurring event in the Grand Hall), and a sense of theatricality that signals what kind of ship this is going to be. Where the Wish has Cinderella’s magic carpet chandelier and the Treasure has Aladdin and Jasmine, the Destiny signals from the atrium that this sailing is going to feel different from anything that came before.
The villain presence is particularly distinctive. Cruella de Vil has her own piano lounge. Maleficent holds court in a dedicated lounge experience. Dr. Facilier runs a small-group parlor on the upper levels of the Grand Hall. These are not background details: they are fully realized immersive experiences that have already become the most talked-about aspects of the ship among guests who have sailed her.
Pro Tip: The Destiny’s layout is the same as the Wish and Treasure, so if you have sailed either of those ships, you will feel at home quickly. If this is your first Wish-class sailing, give yourself a day to learn the ship and review the deck map in the Navigator app before you board.
Disney Destiny Deck Layout
The Destiny has 15 decks and shares the same fundamental layout as the Wish and Treasure, with the Destiny’s hero and villain theming carried through each neighborhood.
- Deck 2: Staterooms, Walt Disney Theatre (accessible entrance)
- Deck 3: Grand Hall (Black Panther/Wakanda-inspired atrium), Guest Services, De Vil’s Piano Lounge, The Rose, Walt Disney Theatre (main entrance), shopping
- Deck 4: Worlds of Marvel, Walt Disney Theatre balcony, Preludes, Sarabi Theatre, Never Land Cinema, Bibbidi Bobbidi Boutique, Guest Services, Port Adventures
- Deck 5: Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King, 1923, Edge (tweens), Senses Spa and Fitness, The Sanctum (Doctor Strange lounge), Cask and Cannon bar, Saga (adults-only entertainment lounge)
- Decks 6–10: Staterooms
- Deck 11: Marceline Market (food hall), Mickey and Friends Festival of Foods (quick service)
- Deck 12: Main pool area, AquaMouse loading area, Vibe (teens), Haunted Mansion Parlor, Palo Steakhouse, Enchanté, Concierge Lounge, staterooms
- Deck 13: Quiet Cove adult infinity pool, Quiet Cove Whirlpool, Cove Bar, Cove Cafe, adults-only Sun Deck, staterooms
- Decks 14–15: Concierge Tower Suite (two-story)
Pro Tip: The Quiet Cove adults-only infinity pool on Deck 13 aft is only accessible from the outer decks, not from the interior, the same as on the Wish and Treasure. Head outside on Deck 13 and walk toward the stern. Many guests miss it on their first day.
Dining on the Disney Destiny
The Destiny’s dining lineup is exceptional, anchored by a brand-new theatrical dinner experience (Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King) alongside two returning Wish-class favorites (Worlds of Marvel and 1923). If you have sailed the Wish or Treasure, you will recognize two of the three restaurants but find the details meaningfully different in each case, and Pride Lands is a genuine first for the fleet.
Rotational Dining: The Three Main Restaurants
The Destiny rotates guests through Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King, Worlds of Marvel, and 1923. Your servers rotate with you through every dinner, learning your preferences, dietary needs, and any celebrations from night one.
Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King
Pride Lands is the Destiny’s crown jewel in the rotational dining lineup and is exclusive to this ship. Themed around Pixar’s beloved The Lion King, it is a full theatrical dinner show experience where a cast of live musicians and storytellers present a musical journey through the film’s iconic score between courses. The dining room immerses guests in the African savanna, with lighting and special effects including windows that transform from sunrise to sunset throughout the meal. A central stage hosts live performances of the film’s iconic songs, including Circle of Life, Hakuna Matata, and more.
The menu is African-inspired and among the most distinctive and flavorful in the fleet, with dishes like berbere-spiced roasted chicken with jollof rice, Cape Malay shrimp curry, curried apricot chicken sosaties, and a warm chocolate malva pudding. On sailings of five nights or longer, guests who dine at Pride Lands a second time will experience a different menu and show, so repeat visits do not feel like a rerun.
Pride Lands is drawing comparisons to Plaza de Coco on the Treasure as the emotional heart of the rotational dining lineup. The combination of live African-inspired music, bold cuisine, and the storytelling of The Lion King woven through every course makes it one of the most immersive dining experiences in the entire Disney Cruise Line fleet.
Worlds of Marvel

Worlds of Marvel on the Destiny is the same immersive Avengers mission concept guests know from the Wish and Treasure, but with a Destiny-specific twist in its second-night show. The first night features the Ant-Man and the Wasp storyline. On longer sailings, the second night on the Destiny features a Groot-themed show variant. Having experienced Worlds of Marvel on the Wish firsthand, I can tell you it is one of the most fun dinners you can have at sea: genuinely exciting, cleverly written, and engaging even for guests who are not devoted Marvel fans. Our teenagers were completely hooked from the first scene.
1923
Named for the year the Walt Disney Company was founded, 1923 on the Destiny is the same beautifully designed restaurant found on the Wish and Treasure, split into the Walt Disney and Roy Disney dining rooms with over 800 pieces of original Disney artwork, storyboards, and artifacts throughout. The California-inspired menu features elevated dishes including filet mignon, rack of lamb, and seafood, and it is the most elegant and refined of the three rotational restaurants. It was our family’s favorite dinner on the Wish by a meaningful margin, and that experience carries directly to the Destiny. It also opens for breakfast and lunch on most sailing days.
Palo Steakhouse
Palo Steakhouse on the Destiny is identical in concept to the Wish and Treasure: an adults-only premium steakhouse accessed through The Rose lounge, with a high-end menu of cuts, sides, and exceptional service. The brunch on sea days is also available. Book it the moment your check-in window opens.
Enchanté by Chef Arnaud Lallement
Enchanté is the adults-only fine dining restaurant, a multi-course French experience created in partnership with three-Michelin-starred chef Arnaud Lallement and accessed through The Rose. The Beauty and the Beast theming carries through the room, tableware, and presentation. It is the highest-end dining option on the ship and best saved for a special occasion.
Marceline Market and Quick Service
Marceline Market on Deck 11 is the same 10-stall themed food hall found on the Wish and Treasure, serving as the casual breakfast and lunch option throughout the sailing. Mickey and Friends Festival of Foods provides quick-service options on the pool deck, with five character-inspired stations including Mickey’s Smokestack Barbeque, Daisy’s Pizza Pies, Goofy’s Grill, Donald’s Cantina, and Minnie’s Delights for soft serve. Room service is available 24 hours a day and included in your fare.
Bottom Line: The Destiny’s dining lineup is one of the strongest in the fleet. Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King is the must-experience standout, delivering bold African-inspired cuisine alongside a genuinely moving Lion King dinner show. Book Palo Steakhouse the moment your check-in window opens, and save Enchanté for your most special evening.
Entertainment on the Disney Destiny
The Destiny’s entertainment lineup is the most ambitious Disney Cruise Line has ever mounted on a single ship, and it goes well beyond the Walt Disney Theatre. Heroes and villains are woven through every evening of the sailing in ways that make the Destiny feel more like an immersive theatrical experience than a traditional cruise.
Walt Disney Theatre
The Destiny’s three productions are Disney Hercules, Frozen: A Musical Spectacular, and Disney Seas the Adventure. The Walt Disney Theatre features the same Dolby Atmos 3D audio system as the Wish and Treasure.
Disney Hercules is exclusive to the Disney Destiny and is already generating significant buzz as one of the most technically spectacular productions Disney Cruise Line has ever staged. It features a five-headed Hydra puppet that battles Hercules on stage, with the hero going from zero to hero in front of an audience that reportedly reacts as though it is watching a live action film. The staging, effects, and scale of the production push what is possible in a shipboard theater.
Frozen: A Musical Spectacular is a full theatrical retelling of the beloved film, with elaborate staging, the iconic songs, and the kind of production values that Disney Cruise Line is known for. Guests who know and love Frozen will find this production deeply satisfying, and for families who have not seen Frozen in a theatrical context, it is a genuinely impressive introduction.
Disney Seas the Adventure is the first-night welcome show performed on all three Wish-class ships, starring Captain Minnie and Goofy as they sail into uncharted waters on a journey of discovery. Having seen this show on the Wish, I can tell you it is one of our daughters’ favorites in the entire fleet, warm, funny, and a genuinely joyful way to begin a sailing. It sets the tone for the week in the best possible way.
Disney Hercules: The Villainous Coliseum (Adults-Only Show)
This is one of the most distinctive new entertainment offerings on any Disney cruise ship: a dedicated adults-only show in the Saga lounge that uses PG-13 humor and Marvel music to retell some of the most beloved Marvel stories with a distinctly grown-up sensibility. It is the first adults-only Marvel production Disney Cruise Line has ever created and has been described by guests as genuinely surprising and very funny.
Villain Character Experiences
This is where the Destiny truly sets itself apart from every other ship in the fleet. The villain encounters are not traditional meet-and-greet lines. They are fully realized interactive experiences.
Maleficent holds court in the Saga lounge in a show-and-meet experience called Under Her Spell, transforming the room into a medieval throne room with lightning, fire, rain, and smoke effects, inviting the bravest guests to approach her. Dr. Facilier runs an intimate small-group parlor experience on the upper levels of the Grand Hall for groups of fewer than 12 guests at a time, practicing card tricks and sleight of hand in close-up.
Cruella de Vil appears in De Vil’s Piano Lounge for Treblemaking with Cruella, where guests help her rewrite the words to the classic Cruella de Vil song, and walks guests down the Wretched Runway in a fashion show experience in the Grand Hall. Loki takes over the Grand Hall in a recurring event where he declares himself ruler of the ship.
These experiences are consistently cited by guests as the highlight of the Destiny sailing, not just among the best villain interactions Disney has ever offered, but among the best character experiences across the entire fleet.
AquaMouse: Curse of the Golden Egg
The Destiny’s AquaMouse runs the same Curse of the Golden Egg storyline as the Treasure, with Mickey and Minnie on a quest into an ancient temple. The same 760-foot water coaster with animated Disney storytelling inside the tube. Best ridden during the sailing-away party.
Disney Uncharted Adventure
The same multi-day mobile interactive game found on the Wish and Treasure runs on the Destiny, turning the entire ship into a playfield across the sailing. Start it on embarkation day.
Kids and Teen Programming
The Destiny’s youth clubs follow the same elaborately themed model as the Wish and Treasure.
- Marvel Super Hero Academy (ages 3–12): Avengers-themed activities, missions, and character interactions.
- Fairytale Hall (ages 3–12): Disney princess-themed creative spaces.
- Star Wars Cargo Bay (ages 3–12): Star Wars missions and activities.
- Walt Disney Imagineering Lab (ages 3–12): STEM-focused creative programming.
- 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.
- Vibe (ages 14–17): Teen club with its own programming and social atmosphere.
Adults-Only Spaces on the Disney Destiny
The Destiny’s adults-only experience is extraordinary, and it is built around something no other Disney cruise ship has attempted: themed lounge spaces where Disney villains are the hosts. Combined with the returning Haunted Mansion Parlor, Palo Steakhouse, Enchanté, and the Quiet Cove infinity pool, the Destiny makes a compelling case as the best ship in the fleet for adult Disney fans.
- De Vil’s Piano Lounge (Deck 3): A Cruella de Vil-themed piano bar just off the Grand Hall, with an over-the-top Dalmatian-print aesthetic, craft cocktails, and the Treblemaking with Cruella character experience at select times. It is widely considered one of the two best adult spaces on the ship, elegant and theatrical and deeply committed to the bit.
- Cask and Cannon (Deck 5): A pirate-inspired rum bar with an extensive rum menu, craft cocktails, and a swashbuckling atmosphere. Consistently ranked by guests who have sailed the Destiny as the single best adult space on the ship. If you love rum or pirate lore, this is your venue.
- The Sanctum (Deck 5): A Doctor Strange-inspired lounge with mystical design, specialty cocktails, and an atmosphere that leans into the Marvel Sorcerer Supreme aesthetic. One of the most visually distinctive bar spaces on any Disney cruise ship.
- Saga (Deck 5): A multi-use adults-only entertainment lounge that transforms throughout the sailing. It hosts the Under Her Spell Maleficent experience, the adults-only Marvel comedy show, and other evening programming. The most flexible of the adults-only venues in terms of what it becomes across the course of the sailing.
- Haunted Mansion Parlor (Deck 12): The same extraordinary Haunted Mansion-themed cocktail lounge found on the Disney Treasure, telling an original story of a sea captain and his fiancée with craft cocktails, atmospheric effects, and hitchhiking ghosts materializing in the mirrors. Adults-only in the evenings.
- The Rose (Deck 3): The Beauty and the Beast champagne and cocktail lounge serving as the gateway to Palo Steakhouse and Enchanté. A beautiful pre-dinner drink spot.
- Palo Steakhouse (Deck 12): The adults-only specialty steakhouse. See the dining section above.
- Enchanté by Chef Arnaud Lallement (Deck 12): The adults-only fine dining restaurant. See the dining section above.
- Quiet Cove Pool and Infinity Pool (Deck 13 aft): The adults-only infinity pool, hot tubs, Cove Bar, and Cove Cafe, accessible from the outer decks on Deck 13.
- Senses Spa and Salon: Full-service spa, salon, barbershop, and fitness center with Rainforest Room available by day or voyage pass.
Bottom Line: The adult experience on the Disney Destiny rivals and in some respects exceeds anything else in the fleet. De Vil’s, Cask and Cannon, The Sanctum, Saga, and the Haunted Mansion Parlor give adults five fully themed evening venues, each with its own identity and programming, alongside two specialty restaurants and an infinity pool. Disney fans who love villains especially will find the Destiny feels like it was built specifically for them.
Staterooms on the Disney Destiny

The Destiny’s staterooms share the same categories, sizes, and split bathroom layout as the Wish and Treasure. The heroes and villains aesthetic carries through in the Disney-themed artwork and custom headboard murals, with staterooms themed to different Disney stories throughout the ship.
Room Categories
- Inside Staterooms: Starting at 169 square feet, sleeping up to four guests. Well-designed with Disney-themed details.
- Deluxe Oceanview Staterooms: 218 square feet with a large porthole window.
- Deluxe Family Oceanview Staterooms: 237 square feet with a large porthole, sleeping up to five guests.
- Deluxe Oceanview Stateroom with Verandah: 243 square feet including the balcony.
- Deluxe Family Oceanview Stateroom with Verandah: 284 square feet including the balcony, sleeping up to five guests. The sweet spot for families of four or five who want outdoor space without going to concierge level. On the Wish, this was the stateroom our family stayed in, and our teen daughters claimed the verandah as their own from day one.
- Concierge Staterooms and Suites: From one-bedroom suites to the two-story Concierge Tower Suite on Decks 14 and 15. Concierge guests receive priority boarding, dedicated staff, exclusive lounge access, and the concierge embarkation lunch at 1923.
The Split Bathroom
The split bathroom design continues on the Destiny: toilet and sink in one room, tub, shower, and second sink in another. For families sharing a stateroom, this remains one of the most practical features on any Disney ship, and having experienced it firsthand on the Wish, it genuinely changes how manageable mornings feel.
All staterooms include a refrigerator, in-room safe, hair dryer, and under-bed luggage storage.
Pro Tip: The Deluxe Family Oceanview Stateroom with Verandah is the practical sweet spot for families of four or five. At 284 square feet including the balcony, it gives everyone room to breathe. Our family found it ideal on the Wish, and the same logic applies directly to the Destiny.
Disney Destiny Cruise Ship Itineraries: Where Does It Go?

The Destiny sails from Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which is a meaningful distinction from the Wish and Treasure’s Port Canaveral home port. Fort Lauderdale is more convenient for South Florida guests and international travelers flying into Miami or Fort Lauderdale international airports.
4- and 5-Night Bahamas and Caribbean
The Destiny’s current schedule runs 4- and 5-night itineraries from Fort Lauderdale. Bahamian itineraries include stops at Nassau and one or both of Disney’s private island destinations, Castaway Cay and Disney Lookout Cay at Lighthouse Point. Some itineraries visit both private islands in a single sailing, making them a particularly compelling option for guests who want maximum Disney island time. Western Caribbean itineraries include Cozumel, Mexico, alongside private island stops.
The 4- and 5-night length is a middle ground between the Wish’s shorter 3- and 4-night sailings and the Treasure’s 7-night schedule, making the Destiny one of the most accessible entry points into Wish-class Disney cruising for guests who want a bit more time at sea than the shortest Wish sailings offer.
Seasonal Sailings
Halloween on the High Seas sailings and Very Merrytime Christmas cruises bring seasonal character experiences and themed entertainment throughout the fall and winter schedule. The Destiny’s heroes and villains theme adds particular energy to Halloween on the High Seas, where the villain experiences already built into the sailing align naturally with the seasonal programming.
Pro Tip: Fort Lauderdale is a different departure port from Port Canaveral, which means the Destiny is the natural Wish-class choice for South Florida residents and for guests flying in from out of state who have more convenient flight options into Fort Lauderdale or Miami than into Orlando. If both the Wish and Destiny are under consideration, the departure port is often the practical deciding factor.
The Disney Destiny vs. the Disney Wish and Treasure
Since all three ships share the same Wish-class bones, the comparison most guests make is about the exclusive experiences that differentiate each one. Here is the honest breakdown.
The structural layout, stateroom sizes, AquaMouse, Quiet Cove pool, Marceline Market, Palo Steakhouse, Enchanté, The Rose, Haunted Mansion Parlor, and the youth clubs are all essentially the same across the Wish, Treasure, and Destiny. The returning restaurants (1923 and Worlds of Marvel) are also shared, with show variations specific to each ship.
The meaningful differences are in the exclusive experiences. The Destiny has Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King (versus Arendelle on the Wish and Plaza de Coco on the Treasure), Disney Hercules on stage (versus The Little Mermaid on the Wish and The Tale of Moana on the Treasure), and the villain character experiences that are unique to this ship. The adults-only lounges are a different set: De Vil’s, Cask and Cannon, The Sanctum, and Saga replace the Wish’s Hyperspace Lounge and the Treasure’s Skipper Society and Periscope Pub.
The departure port also sets the Destiny apart: Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale versus Port Canaveral for both the Wish and Treasure.
If you love Disney villains, the Destiny is unambiguously the ship for you. If you prefer heroes and a more purely adventurous aesthetic, the Treasure’s combination of The Tale of Moana and Adventureland theming may resonate more. If you loved the Wish and want a similar but different experience with the same class of ship, either the Treasure or Destiny offers that.
Insider Tips for First-Time Disney Destiny Sailors
- Book Palo Steakhouse and Enchanté the moment your check-in window opens. Both fill up fast. If Enchanté dinner is gone, check for brunch availability.
- Do not miss Disney Hercules. The five-headed Hydra alone is worth the trip to the theater. See all three shows, but this one is the most unique production in the fleet right now.
- Prioritize the villain experiences early in the sailing. Dr. Facilier’s Parlor is an intimate small-group experience that books up quickly once guests are on board. Ask at Guest Services or check the Navigator app on embarkation day for how to secure a spot.
- Visit De Vil’s and Cask and Cannon on your first evening. Both are among the best adult spaces on the ship and worth experiencing before they become crowded as the sailing progresses.
- Ride the AquaMouse during the sailing-away party. It opens as the ship leaves Fort Lauderdale and lines are short for the first hour.
- Start Disney Uncharted Adventure on day one. The multi-day interactive game spans the entire sailing. Starting early means you get the full experience.
- Tell your rotational dining server everything on night one. Dietary restrictions, allergies, preferences, and celebrations. They rotate with you and will remember it all.
- Get to Pride Lands early on your first visit. The entrance theming is part of the experience, and arriving a few minutes early lets you take in the savanna atmosphere before being seated.
- Locate the Quiet Cove pool before your first sea day. It is on Deck 13 aft, accessible from the outer decks only. Find it in advance so you are not searching for it on your first sea day morning.
- Utilize the Navigator app. The villain experiences, character appearances, show schedules, and interactive game missions are all tracked there. On the Destiny especially, where so much of the best content is time-specific, staying on top of the app makes a real difference.
Is the Disney Destiny Right for Your Family?

The Disney Destiny is a great fit if you:
- Are departing from Fort Lauderdale or South Florida
- Love Disney villains and want them fully integrated into your dining, entertainment, and lounge experiences
- Want an immersive dinner show experience with Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King
- Want to see Disney Hercules, one of the most technically ambitious stage productions in the fleet
- Are traveling with a mix of ages including teens (the villain experiences and adults-only show are particularly compelling for older guests)
- Are looking for a 4- or 5-night sailing as a first Wish-class experience or a longer getaway than the Wish’s shortest sailings offer
- Have already sailed the Wish or Treasure and want the next chapter of Wish-class sailing
You might want to consider a different ship if you:
- Are departing from Port Canaveral (the Wish and Fantasy both sail year-round from there)
- Want a 7-night Caribbean itinerary (the Treasure offers that from Port Canaveral)
- Prefer a heroes-forward rather than heroes-and-villains theme
- Are specifically looking for Arendelle: A Frozen Dining Adventure (Wish exclusive), Plaza de Coco (Treasure exclusive), Tiana’s Place (Wonder exclusive), or Tangled: The Musical (Magic exclusive)
- Prefer the intimate, classic feel of the Magic or Wonder
Bottom Line: The Disney Destiny is the most theatrical ship Disney Cruise Line has ever launched, and the heroes and villains theme gives it an identity unlike anything else in the fleet. The villain character experiences alone, Dr. Facilier’s intimate parlor, Treblemaking with Cruella, Maleficent holding court in Saga, Loki declaring himself ruler of the ship, are the kind of thing Disney fans will talk about for years. Add Pride Lands: Feast of the Lion King, Disney Hercules, Cask and Cannon, and De Vil’s Piano Lounge, and you have a ship firing on every cylinder.
Whether you have sailed every ship in the fleet or this is your first Disney cruise, this Disney Destiny cruise ship guide should leave you ready to book with confidence.
Disney Cruise Line Planning Resources
Ready to start planning your Disney Destiny 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, and tips for making the most of every meal at sea.
Read the full guide
Disney Treasure Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Treasure, including the exclusive Plaza de Coco dining experience, Disney The Tale of Moana, the Haunted Mansion Parlor, and what makes this the most elaborately themed ship in the fleet.
Read the full guide
Disney Wish Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Wish, including its immersive rotational dining at 1923, Worlds of Marvel, and Arendelle, the AquaMouse water coaster, Palo Steakhouse, Enchanté, and what makes this ship the most technologically ambitious in the fleet.
Read the full guide
Disney Fantasy Cruise Ship Guide
A complete guide to the Disney Fantasy, including Pixar Day at Sea, the Aladdin stage show, year-round sailing from Port Canaveral, and why this ship is one of the best in the fleet for families with young children.
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, 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!
