Managing Cruise Passenger Capacity
When a cruise ship arrives, thousands of passengers may come ashore within hours. Understanding and managing your capacity ensures you can serve guests well without being overwhelmed.
Understanding passenger numbers
Each cruise arrival in Launchpad shows key capacity information:
Passengers onboard — the number of guests on the ship
Crew onboard — crew members who may also come ashore
Total onboard — combined passenger and crew count
Ship capacity — the vessel's maximum passenger limit
Not all passengers will visit your business, but these numbers help you estimate potential demand.
Estimating your share of passengers
Consider these factors when planning:
Disembarkation rates
Port-intensive itineraries — 70-90% of passengers may go ashore
Beach/resort destinations — 50-70% typically disembark
Weather conditions — rain or extreme heat reduces shore activity
Your business type
Attractions near the port — higher foot traffic
Specialised experiences — targeted audience, lower but dedicated visitors
Retail and dining — depends on location and visibility
Timing patterns
Peak ashore time — typically 9am to 2pm
Return flow — passengers head back 1-2 hours before departure
Lunch rush — 11:30am to 1:30pm for food and beverage
Setting your capacity limits
To avoid overcommitting, set clear limits:
Step 1: Know your maximum
Calculate your comfortable maximum:
How many guests can you serve well at once?
How many bookings can you handle per hour?
What's your minimum staff-to-guest ratio?
Step 2: Create capacity buffers
Build in breathing room:
80% rule — only accept bookings up to 80% of your maximum
Wave planning — stagger bookings across time slots
Staff flexibility — have backup team members on call
Step 3: Monitor in real-time
On cruise days:
Track arrivals as they happen
Adjust wait times if needed
Communicate clearly with guests about capacity
Using arrival data for planning
Your Cruise Arrivals page helps you plan ahead:
Review upcoming arrivals — see which ships are scheduled
Check passenger counts — understand potential demand
Note arrival times — plan your staffing accordingly
Example planning scenario
Situation: A ship with 2,500 passengers arrives at 8am, departing at 5pm. Your calculation:
Assume 60% disembark = 1,500 people ashore
Your business typically sees 2% of shore visitors = 30 potential guests
Peak time (10am-2pm) = 4 hours
Average guests per hour = 7-8 people
Your action: Ensure 2-3 staff members are available during peak hours.
Capacity planning for group bookings
Cruise groups require special consideration:
Pre-booked groups — reserve capacity in advance
Walk-in groups — have a process for accommodating spontaneous groups
Maximum group size — set limits based on your operation
See Cruise Group Bookings for more on handling groups.
Communicating capacity to guests
Be transparent about your capacity:
Display wait times — if you're at capacity, let guests know expected wait
Offer alternatives — suggest quieter times or other options
Thank them for patience — cruise passengers understand busy periods
Capacity during multiple ship days
Some ports receive multiple ships on the same day:
Add up total passengers — combine all vessel counts
Note staggered arrivals — different ships may arrive at different times
Plan extended hours — consider opening earlier or staying open later
Increase staffing — ensure adequate coverage throughout the day
Tips for capacity management
Track historical patterns — learn from past cruise days
Build relationships with cruise staff — they can share passenger insights
Create efficient processes — speed of service matters when time is limited
Quality over quantity — better to serve fewer guests well than many guests poorly
Capture contact details — cruise passengers may return as independent travellers
Managing capacity well means every guest has a great experience — and that's what brings them back.
