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Carnival luggage: official rules and my experience

Recommended vs. prohibited cruise items: luggage, swimsuit, hat, sunscreen vs. alcohol, power strip, and knife.

Carnival’s official luggage rules

According to Carnival’s official rules (the same across the whole fleet):

Why these numbers exist at all:

👉 All of this applies the same way to West Coast ports: Long Beach, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle.


How these rules work in real life

On the Pacific Coast you usually see two types of guests:


If you’re driving to Long Beach / San Diego / San Francisco / Seattle

Officially Carnival says:

In reality (my personal experience):

I live in Sacramento. When ticket prices to LAX aren’t appealing, I just get in the car and drive to Long Beach (about 400 miles). And that’s where a classic mental trap kicks in:

“We’re not flying, so we can bring everything.”

In the end I see the same picture with myself and others:

The problem is:

💡 My practical conclusion:
it’s better to bring 2–3 moderate suitcases than a couple of “concrete blocks”.

And remember: anything that doesn’t fit under the bed is going to live in the cabin walkway all week.


If you’re flying into LAX / SAN / SFO / SEA

According to Carnival’s rules:

But in real life the first filter is the airline, not the cruise line.

Most airlines:

Real life example:
friends flew to Seattle for an Alaska cruise and the real limit wasn’t Carnival, it was Delta – every suitcase was weighed strictly. They never even got to the point of discussing Carnival’s rules.

💡 Practical takeaway:
if you’re flying, check your airline’s baggage rules first,
and only then cross-check with Carnival’s luggage rules.


Different itineraries – different packing

The official numbers are the same, but the contents of your bags for Mexican Riviera, Alaska and Hawaii are very different.


Mexican Riviera / Baja Mexico (Panorama, Firenze and others)

In terms of clothes and stuff:

Weight is usually not the issue, volume is:
you think you’re traveling light, and on the way back you somehow have an extra bag “for all the nice and necessary stuff”.

My personal Mexican Riviera hack

Once we boarded a Carnival ship early in Long Beach. Cabins weren’t ready yet, checked bags were still somewhere in the terminal.

My wife:

In the evening people were still unpacking, and we were heading to the pool for the second time.
Since then, swimsuit in the carry-on is a mandatory item for me.


Alaska from Seattle / San Francisco

Here it’s the opposite story.

In practice, packing looks like this:

Even if it doesn’t feel like you have that much stuff, two suitcases can easily creep over 50 lb.

We had a situation once:
one suitcase with jackets, thermal layers and gear ended up at almost 55 lb,
the second was 38. We had to repack everything right there on the curb at the port. Not the best way to start a vacation.

💡 From experience:
for Alaska it makes sense to invest in light but warm layers,
and not bring three pairs of heavy boots for each person.
Heavy but compact gear is better carried in your carry-on.


Hawaii / long repositioning cruises

Long cruises (15+ days) push you toward this thinking:

“We’re not flying, so let’s bring this extra suitcase. And that one. And a blanket. And a couple more books…”

In reality:

That’s when it really helps to ask yourself honestly (I do this before Hawaii or any repositioning cruise):

“Am I actually going to use this, or am I packing it just because I still have space?”


Drinks & snacks: what’s allowed and what’s not


Food and snacks

According to Carnival’s official rules:

This hits especially hard for West Coast folks who like to “stock up from home” and basically bring half the fridge on board.


Alcohol and soft drinks

What Carnival officially allows:

You can pre-order a case of water to your cabin through Carnival’s website – that’s the official, hassle-free way.

My practical view


What else you’re allowed to bring

Officially Carnival allows:

My experience


What’s strictly forbidden (and where people get into trouble most often)

Anything that generates a lot of heat

According to Carnival’s rules the following are banned:

This is pure fire safety. These items will be confiscated at embarkation and, in the best case, returned at the end of the cruise.

Real-life story

A friend of my wife packed a small garment steamer, thinking “it’ll be fine”.
It wasn’t. Security found it during screening, took it away and only gave it back after the cruise.
That same day the paid pressing/steaming service on board suddenly looked very reasonable.


Weapons, knives, pepper spray, etc.

According to Carnival:

From my own experience

Once I forgot a small Swiss knife in my pocket.
We tried to “hide” it in a toiletry bag next to a manicure set – they still found it and confiscated it.
They check manicure and pedicure kits very carefully.

I have one simple rule now: check your pockets before the terminal, especially if you’re dressed “like any normal weekend” and you’re used to carrying a pocket knife or multitool every day.


Alcohol over the limit and bottled water

Officially:

In practice, extra alcohol is just taken away with no refund. Sometimes they give something back at the end, but you really shouldn’t count on that.


Bluetooth speakers and “portable parties”

According to Carnival’s rules:

The reason is simple:
so everybody can hear safety announcements and so the open decks don’t turn into 20 competing playlists at once.

Personally, as someone who sometimes just wants to sit quietly and look at the ocean, I’m happy this rule exists.


Marijuana, CBD, edibles and similar products

This point is especially important for the West Coast.

Carnival’s official position:

What this means in practice:

I personally saw a guy get pulled from embarkation in Long Beach because he had a small jar of “medical” marijuana in his pocket. He was sure “it’s legal in California” – but that doesn’t apply at a cruise terminal.

My approach is simple: this is a red zone – don’t experiment at all.


Porters and luggage tags


Dropping off checked luggage

Officially the process looks like this:

Unofficial but normal practice:


Carnival luggage tags

After you complete online check-in on Carnival’s website you:

My practical tips


What you should always keep in your carry-on

The basic official Carnival list plus the things that actually save your first day.


Always in your carry-on (no matter the itinerary)


If it’s Mexican Riviera / Baja

That’s exactly the scenario where you can become “the first person in the hot tub” while everyone else is still waiting for their bags to show up in the hallway.


If it’s Alaska or spring/fall out of Seattle / SF


And separately, according to Carnival’s rules


Smart summary: official rules vs my real-world experience


Carnival numbers worth remembering


My personal experience as a West Coast cruiser


I cruise the West Coast regularly – sometimes driving from Sacramento to Long Beach, sometimes flying to Seattle – and every time I see people making the same mistakes, even though all the info is in the rules.

If you separate two layers clearly in your head:

then luggage stops being a headache, and embarkation becomes calm – without arguments at the x-ray and without “goodbye, favorite knife/steamer/bottle”.


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