The Best Cruises for Families

Look for kids clubs and amenities like waterslides and mini golf to keep little ones entertained.

Sally French
Meghan Coyle
Updated
Family travel is having a moment — and cruising is leading the way. A record 37.2 million people cruised globally in 2025, according to CLIA's 2026 State of the Cruise Industry report, and families are a big part of that surge: roughly a third of sailings now involve multiple generations traveling together, and the share of cruisers under 40 keeps climbing. Ships are evolving faster than ever to keep up, with onboard waterparks, kids clubs and dining built to please picky eaters as cruise lines compete fiercely to be the family choice.
But not every cruise line is equally suited for families. Some are too sedate. Others are too expensive. And some just haven't kept up with the times.
After reviewing the major family cruise lines, sailing on many of these ships ourselves, and comparing the details, we've identified the three best cruise lines for families in 2026:
  • Royal Caribbean International (best overall for families and multigenerational groups)
  • Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) (best for flexibility and entertainment variety)
  • MSC Cruises (best for affordability and European flair)
We also give an honorable mention to Disney Cruise Line, which remains magical but has priced itself out of reach for many families. Royal Caribbean sailings to the Caribbean, Bahamas and Bermuda in 2026 average more than 60% cheaper than Disney Cruises for most of the year, according to data provided by Cruise Critic to NerdWallet.
Here’s how they stack up — and how to choose the right line for your family.

Royal Caribbean International: Best overall for families

Fun, Person, Water
Thrill Island on the Star of the Seas. (Photo by Sally French/NerdWallet)
Royal Caribbean is the undisputed king of family cruising in 2026, thanks to its enormous fleet, over-the-top ships and carefully designed kids programming.

Why Royal Caribbean wins for families

Royal Caribbean’s newest ships, including Icon of the Seas (2024) and Star of the Seas (2025) and Legend of the Seas, debuting July 2026, are essentially floating theme parks. They feature:
  • Surfside, an entire neighborhood dedicated to families with young kids (pint-sized pools, kid-friendly dining, play areas).
  • Thrill Island, a full-scale waterpark with slides, pools and adventure activities.
  • AquaDome, a domed venue that transforms from a daytime lounge into a nighttime Cirque du Soleil-style stunt show with divers, acrobats and slackliners.
  • Ice skating rinks, zip lines, escape rooms and surf simulators — most of which are included in the fare.
Legend of the Seas, the third Icon-class ship, brings the same headliners — the Surfside neighborhood, the largest waterpark at sea and the three-story Ultimate Family Townhouse — plus a "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" musical. One catch for U.S. families: Legend debuts in the Mediterranean, sailing seven-night itineraries from Barcelona and Rome, not the Caribbean. So if you want an Icon-class ship close to home in 2026, Icon or Star out of Florida is still the move — Legend is the pick only if you're already planning a Europe trip.
But what makes Royal truly family-friendly is its scale: multigenerational groups can easily spread out between kid-centric zones, adult-only pools, and teen hangouts. There’s something for every age bracket — and plenty of staff to keep kids entertained.

Kids programs

Indoors, Interior Design, Architecture
(Photo by Sally French/NerdWallet)
Royal Caribbean’s Adventure Ocean program divides kids into age-appropriate groups:
  • Aquanauts (3–5 years).
  • Explorers (6–8 years).
  • Voyagers (9–12 years).

Dining for families

Indoors, Architecture, Building
Royal Caribbean's Wonderland restaurant. (Photo by Sally French)
Royal Caribbean gets creative with dining. Its My Family Time Dining lets kids finish quickly (about 45 minutes) before Adventure Ocean staff pick them up, so parents can linger over a more relaxed dinner. Specialty dining is abundant — think teppanyaki, steakhouses and even whimsical venues like Wonderland. But the base fare covers main dining rooms, buffets and kid-friendly quick-service spots.

Where Royal Caribbean falls short

  • Consistency across ships: The biggest, newest ships (Icon and Star) are spectacular, but smaller or older ships (Ovation, Rhapsody) feel more limited. Families wanting the “theme park at sea” experience should stick to the newest vessels.
  • Crowds: With more than 6,000 passengers on Icon or Star, these ships can feel overwhelming, especially at peak times.
  • Flexibility: Dining and entertainment schedules remain more rigid than NCL’s Freestyle approach.
Bottom line: For families who want all-day thrills, Broadway-level shows and spaces tailored to every age group, Royal Caribbean is the most complete family cruise line in 2026.

Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL): Best for flexibility and entertainment variety

norwegian cruise line NCL Aqua aqua slidecoaster
(Photo by Sally French)
NCL doesn’t have ships as massive as Royal Caribbean’s Icons, but it makes up for it with flexibility, freestyle dining and innovative entertainment. It happens to be our pick for best overall cruise line.

Why NCL works for families

norwegian cruise line NCL Aqua Slidecoaster Sally French
The Slidecoaster on the Norwegian Aqua. (Photo courtesy of Matt Roseboom, Attractions Magazine)
NCL pioneered the Freestyle Cruising concept: no fixed dining times and no formal dress codes. That flexibility matters to families juggling nap schedules, picky eaters, or teenagers who refuse to dress up for dinner.
NCL’s newest ships, like Norwegian Prima and Norwegian Aqua, push boundaries in different ways:
  • Slidecoaster, the first hybrid waterslide-rollercoaster at sea.
  • Indulge Food Hall, offering global street food-style dining included in the fare.
  • Broadway-caliber entertainment, including shows like Beetlejuice and Jersey Boys.
  • Cirque-style productions like Elements: The World Expanded with acrobats, dancers and illusions.

Kids programs

NCL divides its youth programs into:
  • Splash Academy (ages 3–12) with creative play, scavenger hunts, and sports.
  • Entourage (13–17), a teen club that morphs into a dance space after dark.
  • Guppies Open Play (6 months–3 years), a space for parents to play with infants and toddlers (but no drop-off nursery like Royal’s).
Late-night group sitting (fee-based) is available for ages 3–12, giving parents more freedom in the evenings.

Dining flexibility

NCL’s biggest family advantage is dining. Families can eat when they want, where they want. Casual buffets, pizza counters and Asian street food are included. Specialty dining — Brazilian churrascarias, French bistros, teppanyaki — costs extra but adds variety.

Where NCL falls short

  • Younger kids: Unlike Royal, there’s no dedicated nursery for babies and toddlers.
  • Ship size: NCL’s ships don’t have quite the same mega-ship wow factor. No AquaDomes or sprawling Surfside neighborhoods.
  • Consistency: Some older ships lack the bells and whistles of Prima-class vessels.
Bottom line: For families who want flexibility, dining variety, and great entertainment, NCL is a close second to Royal Caribbean — and often more relaxed.

MSC Cruises: Best for affordability and European flair

City, Road, Street
MSC World America's World Promenade. (Photo by Sally French)
MSC has quietly grown into a family cruise powerhouse, offering some of the lowest fares in the industry while still sailing brand-new, stylish ships.

Why MSC is a great family choice

Nature, Outdoors, Sea
The lighthouse at Ocean Cay MSC Marine Reserve, which is MSC Cruises' private island. (Photo by Sally French)
MSC’s newest ships, like MSC World America (2025), are visually stunning with futuristic designs, LED domes, and themed “districts.” They deliver many of the same headline features as Royal and NCL — think waterslides, aquaparks, arcades and 4D simulators — but usually at a lower price point.

Kids programs

MSC divides kids clubs by age:
  • Baby Club (0–3 years), care included in the fare.
  • Mini Club (3–6 years) and Junior Club (7–11 years) with activities like LEGO playrooms.
  • Young Club (12–14 years) and Teen Club (15–17 years) with video games, sports and parties.

Dining

Food, Sweets, Plate
Treats at Sweet Temptations on the MSC World America. (Photo by Sally French)
MSC offers “Happy Dinners,” where kids are whisked off to clubs after eating, leaving parents to finish meals at leisure. Buffets are abundant, with kid-friendly stations, while European flair shows up in fresh pasta, pizza and gelato. Specialty dining is extra but often more affordable than Royal or NCL.

Where MSC falls short

  • Service inconsistency: U.S. travelers sometimes find MSC’s European service less polished.
  • Entertainment: While fun, shows don’t match Royal’s Broadway productions or NCL’s themed spectaculars.
  • Americanization: Though MSC is growing fast in North America, it still feels more European in culture, which some families love — and others don’t.
Bottom line: For families who want modern ships at lower fares, MSC is the value pick. You’ll sacrifice a little on entertainment polish, but the price savings can be enormous.

Honorable mention: Disney Cruise Line (magical but pricey)

The deck of the Disney Wonder. (Photo by Carissa Rawson)
Disney practically invented the concept of the family cruise, and its ships are still magical. Character meet-and-greets, Broadway-style musicals (Frozen, Beauty and the Beast), fireworks at sea and Disney-themed dining keep kids enchanted. The line's newest U.S.-based ship, Disney Destiny, launched in late 2025 with a heroes-and-villains theme and is sailing Caribbean itineraries from Florida throughout 2026 — making it the Disney ship most families will actually book this year.
Disney is also chasing the wow factor abroad: Disney Adventure, which launched in March 2026, is the line's largest ship yet at 6,700 passengers and debuts attractions like an Iron Man roller coaster. But it's homeported in Singapore on short sea-day cruises, so it's a bucket-list trip rather than a practical option for most U.S. families.
Here's the catch: Disney Cruise Line is expensive. Base fares can be double (or more) compared to Royal or MSC, and upcharges (from nursery services to desserts at themed bars) add up. While Disney delivers, Royal's Icon and Star of the Seas now rival Disney's family-friendliness at a much lower price.

How to choose the best family cruise line

  • Choose Royal Caribbean if you want the most complete, theme-park-at-sea experience — especially for multigenerational families.
  • Choose NCL if you value flexibility and entertainment variety, and don’t need a nursery for babies.
  • Choose MSC if you want modern ships at affordable prices, and don’t mind a slightly less polished experience.
  • Choose Disney only if cost isn’t a concern and you want full Disney magic at sea — just know you'll pay 60%+ more than Royal Caribbean for comparable sailings.

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