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Los Angeles Cruise Port Guide: LA, Long Beach, San Pedro

Los Angeles Cruise Guide featuring San Pedro and Long Beach for a stress-free start to your journey.

If you are cruising out of Los Angeles for the first time, this guide is meant to give you a clear, no drama overview. The goal is simple: understand which port you are actually sailing from, how to get there, where to park or stay overnight, and how not to miss your ship.

I am writing this as a practical overview, not as a glossy travel brochure. When it makes sense, I will add short notes from real experience like “this is what I usually do” so you can use them as a starting point and then adjust for your own situation.

How To Use This Guide

  • If you only need the big picture, read the first two sections and the Bottom Line.
  • If you are planning flights, focus on the airport and transportation sections.
  • If you are driving, go straight to the driving and parking part.
  • If you are nervous about timing, read the embarkation and disembarkation day sections carefully.

Big Picture: Los Angeles Cruise Region In A Nutshell

When people say “cruise from Los Angeles”, they usually mean one of two ports that sit next to each other in the same harbor area:

Cruise terminals in San Pedro and Long Beach, showcasing ships from Princess, NCL, Royal, and Carnival.

Both ports serve similar routes: Mexican Riviera, Baja Mexico, repositioning cruises to or from Alaska, sometimes Hawaii or Panama Canal. The difference for you as a passenger is less about the sea and more about which terminal you start from, how you get there, and what your cruise line prefers.

Ports Overview

Port of Los Angeles (San Pedro)

The Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro is the “general” LA cruise port. Different lines come and go here depending on season and itineraries. You will usually see Princess, Norwegian, Royal Caribbean, sometimes MSC or other lines using San Pedro.

San Pedro itself is a working port district. Around the terminal you will find some development, new waterfront areas and basic services, but it is still more about function than about looks. It is perfectly fine for a night before or after a cruise if you pick the right hotel and understand that this is port city life, not a beach resort.

Long Beach Cruise Terminal (Carnival)

Long Beach is the dedicated home for Carnival in the LA region. If your booking is with Carnival and it says Long Beach, you are not sailing from San Pedro, even though on the map they look close.

The Long Beach terminal area feels a bit more self contained: there is the cruise terminal itself, some parking structures, the waterfront area with shops and restaurants, and the city of Long Beach right behind it. For many families who sail Carnival regularly, this location is familiar and comfortable.

Other Southern California Options

Strictly speaking, San Diego and sometimes San Francisco also show up in West Coast cruise searches, but they are separate ports and a different story. This guide focuses on the greater Los Angeles harbor area: San Pedro and Long Beach.

Which Port Is Right For You

In most cases the choice is made for you by the cruise line. Still, it helps to understand the logic and think through what this means for your logistics.

If your cruise is on Carnival

  • You are almost certainly sailing from Long Beach.
  • Plan your parking, hotel and transportation for Long Beach specifically, not just “Los Angeles”.
  • If you want a more walkable city feel around the port, Long Beach works well.

If your cruise is on Princess, Norwegian, Royal Caribbean or similar

  • Expect to sail from San Pedro at the Port of Los Angeles.
  • Check your confirmation and boarding documents to be sure which terminal you are assigned.
  • If you are staying overnight, look at both San Pedro hotels and LAX area hotels depending on your arrival time.

If you live in Southern California and are driving

  • Choose the port that your cruise line uses. You do not pick the port first, the cruise line does.
  • Look at your usual traffic patterns on 110 and 710, not the “ideal” times on the map.
  • For early check in times, consider driving down the night before if you are far from LA.

Airports And Distances To The Ports

Greater Los Angeles has several airports. In practice, for cruises you will mostly deal with three of them, plus two secondary options.

Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)

  • Distance: roughly 20 to 25 miles to either San Pedro or Long Beach.
  • Drive time: without traffic that is 30 to 40 minutes. With real LA traffic, think 45 to 75 minutes.
  • Pros: most flight options, often best fares, many hotel choices.
  • Cons: heavy traffic, busy terminals, messy if you land late and try to rush to the port the same day.

Personally, if I fly into LAX on a separate ticket and the cruise is important, I prefer to arrive the day before, sleep near the airport or halfway to the port, and go to the terminal in the morning. It is not about luxury, it is about having a buffer for delays.

Long Beach Airport (LGB)

  • Distance: about 10 to 12 miles to both San Pedro and Long Beach terminals.
  • Drive time: usually 20 to 30 minutes.
  • Pros: small, calm airport, very convenient for cruises, less time wasted walking through terminals.
  • Cons: fewer flights and airlines, may be more expensive or require connections.

If you can get a reasonable direct flight into Long Beach, it is often the most comfortable option for a cruise out of LA.

John Wayne Airport, Orange County (SNA)

  • Distance: roughly 30 miles from San Pedro and a bit less to Long Beach.
  • Drive time: around 40 to 60 minutes depending on traffic.
  • Pros: smaller and calmer than LAX, good if you combine cruise with an Orange County stay.
  • Cons: can be less convenient if you are only focused on the LA harbor area.

Other airports: BUR and ONT

Burbank (BUR) and Ontario (ONT) are possible but less common choices. Distances and drive times are longer and you cross more of the LA basin, which adds risk if you arrive on cruise day itself. They can still work if flights are much cheaper or if you stay in those areas before heading to the port.

If you are flying in

  • If you see a simple, affordable flight into LGB – take it and enjoy an easier airport.
  • If LAX is much cheaper, consider arriving the day before and sleeping near the airport.
  • Avoid planning tight same day connections like “land at 10:00, boarding at 12:30”. LA traffic does not care about your boarding time.
Graphic comparing rideshare flexibility and shuttle structure, showcasing pricing and wait times, with car trunk in the background.

Transportation From Airport To Port

From the airport to the cruise terminal you usually choose between rideshare services, taxi, cruise line transfers and private shuttles. Here is how they look in practice.

Rideshare: Uber and Lyft

  • Pros: flexible, no need to book in advance, often cheaper than a taxi for small groups.
  • Cons: prices fluctuate with demand, you need a working app and mobile data, vehicle size may be tight for large families with many bags.

From LAX to either San Pedro or Long Beach expect something in the range of a typical city airport transfer. The exact number changes all the time, but as a rough idea it is often similar to or slightly cheaper than taxi for 1 to 3 people.

Taxi

  • Pros: simple, no app, fixed pick up areas at airports.
  • Cons: can be more expensive than rideshare, especially during off peak times when rideshare prices are low.

Cruise line transfers and group shuttles

  • Pros: the bus takes you directly from airport to pier, you do not have to think about directions.
  • Cons: you run on their schedule, not yours, and you may spend extra time waiting for other passengers.

Sometimes cruise transfers make sense for solo travelers who want something simple and predictable. For families, rideshare or private transport often win on both price and flexibility.

View from an airplane window showing runways at LAX, LGB, and SNA with distance and traffic details.

Rental car

  • Pros: full control over your timing, easy to add shopping or a side trip before the cruise.
  • Cons: you must deal with LA traffic, parking and returning the car at the correct location.

If you want to keep it simple

  • Couples and small families often do fine with Uber or Lyft from LAX, LGB or SNA straight to the port.
  • If you are nervous about apps, book a shuttle or use a taxi stand at the airport.
  • If you plan to shop or visit friends before the cruise, a rental car for one day can make sense.

Driving And Parking For LA Cruises

If you live in California or nearby states, driving to the port can be the most straightforward option. The main questions are which freeway to use, when to leave and where to leave the car for the duration of the cruise.

Freeways To Watch

  • For San Pedro: the Harbor Freeway (110) is the classic approach.
  • For Long Beach: you usually see the Long Beach Freeway (710) in your route.

On the map, travel times can look very reasonable. In reality, rush hour, accidents and weekend traffic can add a lot. For embarkation day, it is better to build in extra time than to stare at brake lights and watch your boarding window close.

Highway interchange sign directing to 110 Harbor Freeway (San Pedro) and 710 Long Beach Freeway (Long Beach) at dusk.

Parking Options

  • On site parking at terminals: the most convenient, walkable option. Prices are usually in the range that is normal for big city cruise ports. Not cheap, but predictable.
  • Off site parking lots: sometimes offer slightly lower daily rates and shuttle you to the port. Good if you are price sensitive and do not mind an extra step.
  • Hotel park and cruise packages: stay one night and leave your car in the hotel lot for the duration of the cruise. This can be nice if you anyway want to arrive the day before.

If you are driving to the port

  • Plan your route on 110 or 710 for the correct port, not just “Los Angeles” in general.
  • Add at least 30 to 60 minutes on top of what the map shows for embarkation morning.
  • If you do not like time pressure, arrive the night before, sleep near the port and use hotel parking or a short transfer.

Where To Stay Before Or After Your Cruise

A night before the cruise can be cheap insurance against delays. Los Angeles is big, so first decide what you care about more: being close to the port, being close to the airport or seeing a bit of the area.

Staying near the port

  • Pros: short and simple ride to the ship in the morning, less stress on embarkation day.
  • Cons: fewer hotel options than around LAX, more “port city” feel.

If the only goal is to be close to the ship, this is often the best option. You check in, have dinner somewhere nearby, sleep and go to the port without long drives.

Staying near LAX

  • Pros: many hotels in different price ranges, easy if you land late at night, simple for an early flight home.
  • Cons: in the morning you still have to cross a good part of LA to reach the port.

Personally, if I land late and do not care about sightseeing, I often stay near LAX, sleep, have breakfast and then call a rideshare to the port in the late morning. It is basic, but it works.

Couple enjoying coffee by the seaside, illustrating stress levels: same-day arrival (high risk) vs. day before (zero stress).

Combining cruise with a short stay

If you want to add a day or two of Southern California time before or after the cruise, you can stay in areas like Long Beach, Santa Monica, or parts of Orange County and then head to the port on embarkation day. In that case, just remember that the cruise schedule is the fixed point and the sightseeing is flexible around it.

Embarkation Day: Step By Step

Embarkation day does not have to be chaotic. A simple plan goes a long way.

  1. Eat something before you leave. Do not rely on being on the ship and at the buffet within an hour.
  2. Arrive a bit early. Arriving 30 to 60 minutes before your boarding window usually feels better than running late.
  3. Drop off checked bags. Porters will take your larger suitcases at the curb. Keep documents, medications and valuables in your carry on.
  4. Go through security and check in. Follow the signs and instructions from port staff and cruise line staff.
  5. Board the ship and explore calmly. Your cabin may not be ready instantly, but you can usually find food, sit down and walk the open decks.

If you arrive and there are lines, do not panic. This is normal for big ships. As long as you planned enough time and you are at the right terminal, the process just takes what it takes.

Passenger holding boarding passes outside the terminal, with icons illustrating travel steps: eat, curbside drop, check-in, board.

Disembarkation Day: Flights And Timing

Getting off the ship is usually faster than getting on, but there are still bottlenecks: immigration, customs, luggage and transportation. The main risk is booking your flight too early after arrival.

  • Ships can start disembarkation early in the morning, but you may not be in the first group.
  • There can be lines for customs and for rideshare or taxis outside.
  • Traffic back to the airport is unpredictable, especially on weekdays.

If you are booking flights home

  • Avoid the earliest possible departure time from LAX on the same day your cruise ends.
  • If you carry your own luggage off early and go straight to a waiting rideshare, you have more flexibility.
  • If the budget allows, a later flight or one more night in LA is often the most relaxed option.

Common Mistakes To Avoid

  • Assuming that “Los Angeles” is one port and not checking if your ship leaves from San Pedro or Long Beach.
  • Planning arrival based only on ideal map drive times, without adding any buffer for LA traffic.
  • Booking a tight same day flight and cruise connection with no margin for delay.
  • Mixing up airport transfers and going to the wrong terminal because “it looked right” on the first sign.
  • Not checking your cruise documents for the exact terminal name and address.

Quick Checklists

If you live in Southern California

  • Confirm which port your ship uses: San Pedro or Long Beach.
  • Check typical traffic for your route on 110 or 710 at the same weekday and time as your embarkation.
  • Decide if you are comfortable driving on embarkation morning or if arriving the day before feels better.
  • Book parking or a park and cruise hotel once you know your dates.

If you fly in from out of state

  • Compare flights into LAX, LGB and SNA, not just one airport.
  • If possible, arrive the day before and sleep near the airport or port.
  • Decide early if you want to use rideshare, taxi, shuttle or rental car and budget for it.
  • Plan your departure flight with enough time after scheduled arrival back in LA.
Infographic guide for choosing hotels near LAX or Santa Monica based on travel priorities, featuring a modern hotel room.

FAQ: Los Angeles Cruise Ports

Are San Pedro and Long Beach the same cruise port

No. They share the same general harbor area, but they are different terminals in different cities. One is the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro, the other is the Long Beach Cruise Terminal used by Carnival. Always check your documents to see which one your ship uses.

Which airport is best for a Los Angeles cruise

There is no single “best” airport. For convenience, Long Beach Airport is excellent because it is close and calm. For flight options and price, LAX usually wins. SNA can work well if you also spend time in Orange County. The key is to allow enough time between flights and the cruise.

Do I really need to arrive the day before

Plenty of people arrive on embarkation day and still make their ships. But if you are flying from far away or connecting, arriving the day before reduces risk and stress. One hotel night is cheaper than losing an entire cruise because a flight was delayed or a freeway was blocked.

Is it safe to leave my car at the port parking

Port parking is designed for cruise passengers and used daily by many people. As usual, do not leave valuables in view in the car and follow standard common sense. If you prefer, you can look at off site parking with shuttles or hotel park and cruise packages.

Can I explore Los Angeles on embarkation day

If you arrive very early and live nearby, it is possible to do a short stop somewhere on the way. But in general, it is better to separate sightseeing days from embarkation day. On the day you need to board, your main job is to reach the correct terminal on time and with all documents.

Bottom Line

  • Think of “cruising from Los Angeles” as two main ports: San Pedro and Long Beach, not one vague place.
  • Pick your airport and flight times with LA traffic and cruise schedules in mind, not just ticket price.
  • If your budget allows, arriving the day before and sleeping near the airport or port is simple and effective insurance.
  • On embarkation day, keep the plan boring and predictable so the cruise itself can be the interesting part.
Cruise ship sailing in the ocean with text outlining preparation tips for a smooth voyage experience.

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