Shock deals, sudden cancellations
Over a few hectic hours last weekend, Carnival Cruise Line seemed to be offering the deal of a lifetime. Prices for balcony cabins on eagerly awaited voyages fell to astonishing lows — sometimes around $55 per night or about $375 per person for upscale routes — spurring travelers from several nations to grab what seemed like rare steals. Cruise site Cruise Mummy notes that some offers appeared on the upcoming Carnival Festivale, from Carnival’s Excel‑class fleet.
But the excitement was short-lived. Following a prolonged IT maintenance period and site blackout that lasted well past the stated 18 hours, the company admitted the rock-bottom rates stemmed from a pricing error. Reservations at those incorrect prices are now getting canceled, sparking outrage on social media and cruise forums. AOL and travel site TravelHost report that impacted customers soon got emails stating their bookings wouldn’t stand.
Key details to date:
- Site blackout amid scheduled IT upgrades caused extended downtime.
- Erroneous bargain prices showed up on select voyages, including Festivale.
- Carnival is voiding those reservations, providing refunds plus modest compensation.
- Upset customers deem it “unfair” and claim “this shouldn’t be legal.”
Inside the glitch: what happened and how guests are reacting
Carnival states the issue started during a scheduled IT maintenance effort over the weekend, when its website and various systems went offline. A Reddit post from Carnival employees alerted users that “until 4 p.m. EDT, our website will be down, as well as many of the systems we use to access your booking.”
When the site came back online, some visitors noticed “insanely good pricing” on local site versions, especially the Australia section, before the offers vanished. News sources like Cruise Radio and TravelHost indicate Carnival later recognized that “some guests saw a random display of prices that were far below any reasonable promotional fare” and verified via emails that the rates were a technical glitch.
The backlash has been fierce:
- Numerous customers called the deals “quite literally a steal”, envisioning family trips and special events at sea until cancellation notices arrived.
- Posters on Reddit and Facebook charged the company with bait‑and‑switch tactics, with one popular remark capturing the sentiment: “Apparently Carnival doesn’t honor reservations it doesn’t like.”
- Some highlighted the two‑day period of downtime and glitches and wondered why booking features were made public without full price checks.
Legally, Carnival stands on firm ground. As Cruise Radio and AOL observe, the company’s ticket contract allows it to fix mistaken fares by requesting the proper payment or canceling and refunding — and that’s what Carnival is doing now.
What happens next for Carnival — and for affected travelers
Carnival is processing full refunds for the voided bookings and, per AOL coverage, adding future cruise credit to some, though specific figures remain undisclosed. This hasn’t eased the ire of passengers who arranged flights, hotels, or time off for their now-canceled trips.
Experts note this event underscores the clash between dynamic digital pricing and shoppers’ sense of fairness. Pricing mistakes aren’t rare, but as TravelHost observes, cruise operators seldom honor them like airlines do, particularly on popular new vessels.
Current advice for cruisers is straightforward:
- Those ultra-low Carnival rates were error prices, not a hidden super-sale.
- Reservations at those levels are being canceled, replaced by refunds and targeted credits rather than confirmed sailings.
- Carnival’s contract terms make lawsuits a tough prospect, despite evident reputational harm from furious posts and reviews.
As things calm down, cruisers express letdown and skepticism. Plenty vow to hesitate on Carnival’s next “too good to be true” offer — and for a brand centered on enjoyment, that could be the glitch’s priciest fallout.