Why this port
The kindest embarkation day in big-ship cruising
Every seasoned cruiser eventually learns that the hardest part of a cruise is not the cruise — it is getting to the ship. Port Everglades quietly solves that problem better than any other major American port. The airport sits 2 miles from the terminals, close enough that you can clear baggage claim and be standing at your gangway inside 15 minutes. The pre-cruise hotels cluster along a single street, SE 17th, with restaurants and a Publix in walking distance. And the port itself handled more than 4.7 million passengers last year — the world’s third-busiest cruise homeport — which means the check-in machinery is polished, the porters are plentiful, and wheelchair assistance is routine rather than exceptional.
For travelers over 50, that adds up to something rare: an embarkation day with no long transfer, no unfamiliar logistics, and no reason to rush. This guide walks through everything — the nine cruise lines and where they sail, the terminal layout, the airport transfer, parking, hotels, and the small tactics that make boarding day genuinely pleasant.
The fleet
Nine cruise lines, 40 ships: who sails from Fort Lauderdale in 2026
Port Everglades hosts about 40 ships from nine cruise lines across 2026, with the fleet at its fullest from November through April. Here is who sails from here and what each line means for a senior traveler.
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Holland America Line — the port’s signature senior line
Holland America has made Terminal 26 its winter home for decades, basing several mid-size ships here from fall through spring for 7–14 day Caribbean loops and full Panama Canal transits. For many travelers over 50, "a Fort Lauderdale cruise" simply means Holland America: calm ships, enrichment at sea, and itineraries built for people who prefer ports to waterslides. Read our full
Holland America review (9.1/10).
Terminal 26 · Caribbean & Panama Canal · our top-rated line for seniors
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Princess Cruises — new ships, familiar comfort
Princess bases its newest Sphere-class ships, Sun Princess and Star Princess, at Terminal 19 for winter Caribbean seasons, and keeps Regal Princess sailing week-long Caribbean loops through summer 2026 — one of the few big-ship summer programs from the port. Princess also runs classic Panama Canal itineraries from here. See our
Princess review.
Terminal 19 · year-round presence · Sun & Star Princess winters
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Celebrity Cruises — Edge-class winters
Celebrity has named all five of its Edge-class ships at Port Everglades and typically bases Edge-class hardware here for winter Caribbean seasons — modern luxury, standout dining, and some of the most accessible new ships afloat. Our
Celebrity review covers which ships suit senior travelers best.
Terminal 25 · Eastern & Western Caribbean winters
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Royal Caribbean — and the biggest ship the port has ever seen
Royal Caribbean sails from Terminals 18 and 25, and in November 2026 its new Icon-class Legend of the Seas — over 5,600 passengers — becomes the largest ship ever homeported at Port Everglades. Royal suits multigenerational family sailings; read our
Royal Caribbean review for the senior-specific picture.
Terminals 18 & 25 · Legend of the Seas arrives November 2026
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Silversea — luxury without the flight to Europe
Silversea sails Silver Ray on round-trip Caribbean itineraries from Fort Lauderdale — a rare chance to board an ultra-luxury, all-inclusive ship without flying overseas first. Butler service, open bars, and small-ship calm; see our
Silversea review.
Ultra-luxury round-trips · all-inclusive
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Disney, MSC & Carnival — the family fleet
Disney Destiny sails short Bahamas and Western Caribbean cruises year-round from Terminal 4 — the natural pick for a grandchildren trip — while MSC and Carnival (Terminal 21) round out the port’s nine lines with value-priced Caribbean sailings. Compare them all in our
11 cruise line reviews.
Disney year-round at Terminal 4 · grandkid-friendly short cruises
Itineraries
Where the ships go: Caribbean loops, Bahamas escapes, and the Canal
The bread and butter is the 7-night Eastern or Western Caribbean cruise, with plenty of 10–14 night Southern Caribbean itineraries for those who prefer more sea days and deeper ports. Short 3–5 night Bahamas sailings suit first cruises and family trips. And Fort Lauderdale is the classic Atlantic gateway for the Panama Canal — both partial transits that loop back and full transits onward to the Pacific. In spring and fall, transatlantic and New England repositioning cruises add one-way itineraries that reward flexible schedules.
The transfer
Two miles, ten minutes: the FLL advantage
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International (FLL) is so close to Port Everglades that the transfer barely deserves the name: a taxi or rideshare typically runs $15–$25 and takes 10–15 minutes. Skip the pre-booked shuttle packages — at this distance they cost more time than they save. If Miami International has the better fare or the only nonstop from your city, it works too, but it is about 30 miles and an hour-plus in traffic; treat MIA as a reason to arrive a day early rather than a same-day gamble.
🕑 The one rule veterans never break: fly in the day before
Even with the world’s easiest airport-to-port transfer, a same-day flight delay can still cost you the cruise — ships do not wait. Arriving the afternoon before turns embarkation day into a slow breakfast, a five-minute ride, and an unhurried boarding. One hotel night is the cheapest cruise insurance you can buy.
The port
Terminal by terminal: where your ship actually is
Port Everglades assigns lines to dedicated terminals, which keeps embarkation orderly — you and your luggage go straight to your line’s own building rather than a shared mega-hall.
Terminal 26
Holland America’s dedicated terminal · near Parking Lot A
HALprimary line
Terminal 19
Princess Cruises’ home berth · Lots A and B adjacent
Princessprimary line
Terminals 18 & 25
Royal Caribbean Group · the renovated Terminal 25 also hosts Celebrity
RC & Celebrityprimary lines
Terminal 21
Carnival’s berth under the Carnival Corporation agreement
Carnivalprimary line
Terminal 4
Disney Cruise Line year-round · LEED-certified facility
Disneyprimary line
Terminal 2
Connected to the Heron Garage by an air-conditioned elevated bridge with moving sidewalks — the gentlest parking-to-checkin walk in the port
Variesseasonal
♿ Wheelchair assistance, done right
Arrange embarkation assistance in advance through your cruise line’s accessibility desk (every line sailing here has one) and staff will meet you curbside and take you through check-in, security, and the gangway. Accessible parking spaces exist at every garage and surface lot with a valid placard — and vehicles bearing a Disabled Veteran license plate park free for the entire cruise. Bring your own mobility device tagged with your cabin number, or arrange a rental delivered directly to your stateroom.
Driving in
Parking: the $20 garages and the smarter plays
If you are driving to the port — and much of Florida does — on-site parking is straightforward: $20 per day ($25 oversized) across the Heron and Palm garages (about 2,000 spaces each) and surface Lots A, B, and C, more than 5,500 spaces in all. No reservations are taken, but the port does not routinely fill. Park at the garage or lot nearest your terminal; if your ship uses Terminal 2, the Heron Garage connects by an air-conditioned elevated bridge with moving sidewalks — no outdoor luggage haul at all.
The smarter plays for longer cruises: off-site lots along Eisenhower and in Dania Beach run roughly $5–$10 per day with free terminal shuttles, and several 17th Street hotels offer park-and-cruise packages that bundle your pre-cruise night with parking for the whole sailing — often cheaper than 10 days of garage fees alone.
The night before
The 17th Street playbook: where to stay before you sail
Fort Lauderdale’s genius is that its cruise hotels line one corridor, SE 17th Street, a mile from the terminals, with restaurants, pharmacies, and a Publix supermarket in easy reach for forgotten sunscreen and cabin wine. Because everything is this close, an inexpensive taxi often beats waiting for a scheduled hotel shuttle. These are the stays senior cruisers book again and again:
Hilton Fort Lauderdale Marina
~1.3 miles from the port · The closest full-service classic: waterfront rooms where you can watch your ship arrive, restaurants on-site, and a cruise shuttle around $10 per person.
Check rates →🏨17th St area
Embassy Suites by Hilton Fort Lauderdale 17th Street
~1.3 miles · Two-room suites, free made-to-order breakfast, and an evening reception — the extra space and included breakfast make embarkation morning easy.
Check rates →🏨17th St area
Renaissance Fort Lauderdale Marina Hotel
~1 mile · So close that most guests take a five-minute taxi rather than wait for a shuttle; walkable to 17th Street restaurants and a Publix for last-minute supplies.
Check rates →🏨17th St area
Hyatt Place Fort Lauderdale Cruise Port
~1.3 miles · The reliable mid-range pick: breakfast included, sensible rates, and a scheduled cruise shuttle around $9 per person.
Check rates →🏨17th St area
Pier Sixty-Six
~1 mile · The splurge: a landmark 22-acre waterfront resort with pools, spa, and marina views — worth arriving two nights early for.
Check rates →🏨17th St area
Compare all hotels near Port Everglades →
Boarding day
Embarkation morning, the unhurried version
Check in online as soon as your line opens it and choose a late-morning arrival window — around 11:30 to 1:00 the first rush has boarded, lines are short, and your cabin is nearly ready. Keep medications, documents, and a change of clothes in your carry-on (checked bags can arrive at the cabin hours later). Porters take luggage curbside for a dollar or two per bag — use them; the terminals are efficient, but a luggage-free walk through security is kinder to shoulders and hips. And eat a real breakfast at the hotel: the buffet will still be there tomorrow.
🛡️ Insure the trip before hurricane season does it for you
Fort Lauderdale’s prime season is calm and dry, but summer and fall sailings overlap hurricane season, and medical coverage at sea matters at any age. A policy with trip interruption, medical, and evacuation coverage costs a small fraction of the cruise. Get a quick travel insurance quote →
Questions, answered
Cruising from Fort Lauderdale: the questions we hear most
Do I need a passport for a cruise from Fort Lauderdale? +
For closed-loop cruises (sailing round-trip from Fort Lauderdale), US citizens can technically travel with a government-issued photo ID plus a certified birth certificate. We still strongly recommend a passport: some islands require one, and if you ever need to fly home mid-cruise, a passport is essential.
How far is Fort Lauderdale airport from the cruise port? +
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL) is about 2 miles from Port Everglades. The taxi or rideshare trip typically takes 10 to 15 minutes and costs roughly $15 to $25, which is why most cruisers skip pre-booked shuttles entirely.
Is it better to fly into Fort Lauderdale or Miami for a Port Everglades cruise? +
Fly into FLL if you can: it is 10 minutes from the ship. Miami International is about 30 miles south and can take an hour or more with traffic, though it sometimes has better fares or nonstop options. If you do use Miami, build in generous time and consider staying the night before in Fort Lauderdale.
How much is parking at Port Everglades? +
On-site parking is $20 per day for standard vehicles ($25 for oversized), across two garages and several surface lots with over 5,500 spaces; no reservations are taken. Accessible spaces are available at every garage and lot with a valid placard, and vehicles with a Disabled Veteran license plate park free. Off-site lots with shuttles run roughly $5 to $10 per day.
Can I get wheelchair assistance at the Port Everglades terminals? +
Yes. Request embarkation wheelchair assistance through your cruise line's accessibility desk in advance, and porters and staff will assist from the curb through check-in to the gangway. Accessible parking is available at every garage and lot, and Terminal 2 connects to the Heron Garage via an air-conditioned elevated bridge with moving sidewalks.
When is the best time to cruise from Fort Lauderdale? +
The prime season is November through April, when the full winter fleet is in port, seas are calm, and the Caribbean is dry. Summer brings lower fares and a smaller ship lineup, with hurricane season (June to November) making travel insurance especially worthwhile.
Which cruise lines sail from Fort Lauderdale? +
In 2026, Port Everglades hosts about 40 ships from nine cruise lines. Holland America and Princess base large winter fleets here, joined by Celebrity, Royal Caribbean (whose Icon-class Legend of the Seas arrives in November 2026), Silversea, Disney, MSC, and Carnival, plus luxury calls throughout the season.