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Royal Caribbean Removed All Labadee Calls for 2026: What It Means for Passengers

Cruise ship in ocean labeled Royal Caribbean Labadee 2026 Itinerary Update: Labadee removed for safety reasons.

Updated: January 2026

Royal Caribbean has officially removed its private destination Labadee (Haiti) from every itinerary in 2026. If you booked a cruise that included a stop in Labadee, this is for you. Here’s a calm, real-world breakdown – no panic – of what’s happening and what to do.


What happened

Royal Caribbean took Labadee off the schedule for all of 2026. The reason is the security situation in Haiti. This isn’t a sudden move and it’s not panic. The company made the decision early – months before the season begins.

Important context: Labadee isn’t a regular port. It’s a private area fully owned by Royal Caribbean. They control everything there – security, infrastructure, staff. If they decide to shut down their own destination for a full year, it means they’ve assessed the risks as serious.

But here’s the key point: your cruise is not canceled. Only the itinerary is changing.


Why this decision is normal – and even the right one

Let’s be honest: cruise lines don’t close ports for no reason. Especially not their own private destinations. Labadee brings Royal Caribbean millions of dollars every year. Closing it means lost revenue, disappointed guests, and major logistics headaches for dozens of sailings.

But you know what would cost more? A safety incident. Even one.

COVID lessons that changed the industry

The pandemic hit cruising harder than almost any other part of tourism. Ships sat idle for months. Companies lost hundreds of millions. Reputation was on the line.

What changed after 2020:

  • Decisions are made earlier – they don’t wait until things become critical
  • The risk tolerance is lower – better to play it safe than deal with an emergency evacuation
  • Communication improved – guests get months of notice, not days

Today’s Royal Caribbean is a company that learned how to act ahead of time. Yes, it can look overly cautious. But it’s not weakness – it’s experience that came at a high price.

Timeline of pandemic pivot in 2020, highlighting proactive prevention, lower risk threshold, and advanced communication.

What happens to your booking

If your cruise included Labadee, here’s what usually happens.

Scenario 1: A replacement port

Royal Caribbean will add an alternative port in place of Labadee. It could be:

  • Cozumel (Mexico) – a popular Caribbean stop with beaches and excursions
  • Grand Cayman – great for snorkeling and beach time
  • Nassau (Bahamas) – a classic Caribbean port
  • More time in a port already on the itinerary – for example, extra time in Jamaica or the Dominican Republic
Caribbean destinations: Cozumel beaches, Grand Cayman snorkeling, Nassau culture, replacing Labadee for Royal Caribbean.

Important: they usually try to pick a replacement that keeps the same overall feel. If it was a beach-and-activity itinerary, the replacement is typically similar.

Scenario 2: An extra sea day

Sometimes Labadee is replaced with a day at sea. Sounds boring? A lot of guests actually like it:

  • More time on the ship – pools, shows, spa, restaurants
  • You can sleep in and slow down (port days usually mean early mornings)
  • Royal Caribbean sometimes adds perks – like spa discounts or free activities

Scenario 3: A schedule change

Sometimes the ports stay the same, but the order or timing changes. For example:

  • A morning arrival becomes an afternoon arrival
  • The sequence of ports is different
  • Longer or shorter stays in other ports

What about compensation?

Here’s the reality upfront: there usually isn’t an automatic refund.

Why? Legally, you bought a cruise – not a specific port. That’s in the booking terms (yes, the small print nobody reads). Cruise lines keep the right to change itineraries.

But that doesn’t mean you get nothing:

  • Onboard credit – typically $50–$100 per stateroom
  • Discounts on future cruises
  • Complimentary upgrades (stateroom upgrade, drink packages)
  • In rare cases – a partial refund

When you might be able to cancel without penalties:

If Labadee was the only reason you picked that sailing, you can try contacting Royal Caribbean and explaining. Sometimes they’ll allow you to cancel or move to a different cruise.

But honestly: that’s the exception, not the rule.


A real example: how this works in real life

In fall 2025, I spoke with someone I met on a cruise. Here’s his story:

He booked a cruise back in 2021. His sail date landed right in the middle of lockdowns. The cruise was fully canceled – but the money didn’t disappear. Royal Caribbean issued him a future cruise credit.

And guess when he used it? In 2025 – four years later.

No pressure. No calls telling him he had to use it “right now.” No lawsuits or drama. He simply waited until he actually wanted to cruise again, then booked спокойно.

What that shows: cruise companies think in years, not quarters. Their business depends on repeat customers. Burning their reputation over one sailing isn’t their strategy.


Cruise credit timeline from 2021 to 2025: cancellation in 2021, credit validity for 4 years, new booking in 2025.

Why a cruise isn’t “a flight plus a hotel”

Here’s the key difference between a cruise and planning everything yourself:

When you fly and book a hotel:

  • If something goes wrong, you solve it yourself
  • Flight canceled? You find a new one
  • Hotel closes? That’s on you
  • Political instability? You’re the one getting yourself out

When you’re on a cruise:

  • The ship is your hotel, and it moves with you
  • The itinerary changes? The company handles it
  • A port closes? They take you somewhere else
  • Safety issues? You’re already safe – on the ship

It’s a managed system. You’re not alone with the problem. A multi-billion-dollar corporation is responsible for you – with lawyers, logistics teams, and a reputation they have to protect.


What to do right now

If you already booked a cruise that included Labadee:

  1. Check your email – Royal Caribbean should have sent an update with details
  2. Log into your account on Royal Caribbean’s website – the itinerary should be updated there
  3. Look at the new itinerary calmly – you might actually like the replacement more
  4. Contact the cruise line if you have questions – this is exactly what their support team is for
  5. Check your travel insurance terms – some policies cover “major itinerary changes”

If you’re still planning to book:

  • Remember itineraries can change – that’s part of cruising
  • Choose a cruise for the overall experience, not one specific port
  • Read the booking terms (at least quickly)
  • Consider travel insurance if one port is a deal-breaker for you

Why this matters beyond the Caribbean

Today it’s Haiti. Tomorrow it could be:

  • The Mediterranean (political unrest)
  • Asia (disease outbreaks)
  • The Red Sea (regional conflicts)
  • Caribbean islands after a hurricane

The mechanics are the same everywhere. Once you understand it once, you’re ready for the same situation in any region.

Cruise lines operate globally. They have contingency plans for port closures anywhere in the world. This isn’t improvisation – it’s a proven system.


The main thing to understand

A canceled port call isn’t a crisis. It’s a normal part of the cruise industry.

Royal Caribbean isn’t removing Labadee for a full year because things are fine. But they’re doing it early, openly, and with a replacement plan. That’s a professional, mature approach.

Your cruise will happen. You’ll still sail. You’ll still see the Caribbean. It’ll just look a little different – and that’s normal.

Three things to remember:

  1. Cruise lines act proactively – especially after the pandemic
  2. Your safety matters more than one port – and that’s the right priority
  3. The system works for you – you don’t have to solve logistics yourself

Bottom line – no panic

If Labadee was on your itinerary and now it’s not – don’t panic. Don’t demand an instant refund. Don’t rush to angry social media posts.

Instead:

  • Wait for the official update with details
  • Keep an open mind about the new itinerary
  • Give yourself a day or two to adjust to the news
  • Remember: your vacation isn’t ruined – it’s just slightly changed

The cruise industry survived the pandemic. It learned to stay flexible. It learned to plan for safety early. And it learned not to abandon its passengers.

Your trip can still be great. Just a little different than planned. And sometimes – it’s even better.


Questions about your specific booking? Your best source is Royal Caribbean’s official customer support. This is exactly what they do, and they can clarify the details for your case.

Helpful contacts:

  • Website: royalcaribbean.com
  • Customer support: 1-866-562-7625
  • Your account: Cruise Planner on Royal Caribbean’s website

Fair winds – wherever your itinerary takes you.

Cruise ship deck at sunset with wine glass, promoting vacation relaxation and flexibility.

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