FAQs

Onboard credit is ship money you can use during your cruise—like having a prepaid gift card. You can spend it on drinks, specialty dining, Wi-Fi, spa treatments, excursions, or even onboard shopping.

Travel agents earn commission from every booking. Most keep it. We don't. We pass back the maximum onboard credit allowed by the cruise lines every single time.

Nope. Cruise lines set caps on how much OBC can be given. We simply give you that maximum—while other agents usually pocket it as extra commission.

It depends on your cruise fare and the cruise line's rules. As a ballpark: shorter cruises usually allow $50–$100, longer cruises $150–$500+. When you search a cruise, we'll show you exactly how much.

Yes, it's only valid for the duration of your sailing. Use it onboard for drinks, dining, spa, excursions, or shopping. It disappears when your cruise ends.

Your onboard credit is tied to your booking. If you cancel, the OBC is canceled too. Refunds follow the cruise line's cancellation policy.

Yes. Our OBC stacks with cruise line sales, loyalty perks, or group offers. The only limit is the cruise line's cap.

No. You pay the same published fare you'd see on the cruise line's website—except we give you back the max OBC.

It's automatically applied to your onboard account. You'll see it on your ship card or app as a credit balance. Just swipe and it deducts.

Yes! We're licensed, accredited travel agents. We just run things lean and tech-driven so we can give you back more of the commission.

Right now you can search and request a quote online, then we finalize the booking for you. Soon, you'll be able to book directly through our site.

We support all the major ocean cruise lines—and we're expanding to river and expedition cruises soon.

You'll get a confirmation from both the cruise line and from us. Your onboard credit will appear on your account when you board.

Absolutely. All payments go directly to the cruise line. We never hold your funds—we just facilitate the booking and perks.

Because you'll get the same cabin, same price, same cruise—but more money to spend onboard. It's that simple.