Legend of the Seas Room Prices: Cabin-by-Cabin Cost Breakdown

By Graham H
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Legend of the Seas Room Prices: Cabin-by-Cabin Cost Breakdown

Royal Caribbean's Legend of the Seas hasn't carried a passenger yet, but we've already tracked 56,297 fares across 224 of her sailings since November 2025. That's enough to answer the question every cabin guide dodges: what does each room tier on Legend actually cost?

Every other source lists cabin categories — Inside Plus, Infinite Balcony, the Ultimate Family Townhouse — and quotes a single static figure. We've watched the prices move for 6.5 months. Here's what each tier has actually cost, and where the real value sits.

One finding up front: the jump from an interior to a balcony is only about $45 a night. On a ship this new, that makes the balcony the best-value room on board — and it's not close.

This breakdown covers interior, oceanview, balcony, and suite pricing, how the spread compares to Icon and Star, and which tier earns its price.


Quick Answer: Legend of the Seas Room Prices

Cabin (inaugural season)Typical fareTracked range
Interior$301/night$159–$603
Oceanview$320/night$206–$588
Balcony$346/night$196–$635
Suite$490/night
  • Best value: the balcony — only about $45/night above the interior.
  • Cheapest tier: interior at a typical $301/night.
  • The one tier where Legend isn't priciest: suites land mid-pack against Icon and Star.

What a Legend of the Seas Room Costs

Budget $300–$350 a night for a standard cabin and about $490 for a suite on an inaugural sailing.

Those figures come from 71 inaugural-window sailings between July and December 2026, and more than 32,000 tracked fares across the four room types. The number that matters in the table below is the typical fare — the median price most cruisers will actually see.

Room typeTypical fareTracked rangeSample size
Interior$301/night$159–$6039,033 fares
Oceanview$320/night$206–$5887,453 fares
Balcony$346/night$196–$6357,767 fares
Suite$490/night8,605 fares

The room tiers sit unusually close together. The whole climb from the cheapest interior to a balcony is about $45/night.

That tight spread is the single most useful fact for booking Legend. On most ships, stepping up to a window or a balcony costs real money — here it barely does.

The tracked ranges are enormous. An interior has shown up as low as $159/night and as high as $603 — nearly a 4x spread on the exact same room.

That spread is why a single quote tells you almost nothing. The rest of this guide breaks down each tier and what counts as a fair price.


Interior Cabins

The cheapest way onto Legend — and the tier where the rare discounts actually land.

The interior is the budget pick at a typical $301/night. It's also the room type with the widest tracked range, which cuts both ways.

Interior metricValue
Typical fare$301/night
Lowest tracked$159/night
Highest tracked$603/night
A fair price (7-night)$270/night or below

When a genuine deal appears on Legend, it tends to appear here first. The $159/night low is far below the typical fare — the kind of gap that only shows on the interior.

The call: book the interior only if budget is the deciding factor. For roughly $45 a night more, the balcony is a far better use of the money — which is the point of the next two sections.


Oceanview Cabins

The awkward middle — usually priced too close to the balcony to make sense.

The oceanview runs a typical $320/night. That's about $19 above the interior and only about $26 below the balcony.

Room typeTypical fareGap vs interior
Interior$301/night
Oceanview$320/night+$19/night
Balcony$346/night+$45/night

The oceanview's problem is its neighbors. You're paying a premium over the interior for a sealed window, when another $26/night gets you a real balcony with outdoor space.

The call: skip it unless you specifically want daylight without the open-air deck. On Legend, the oceanview is a niche pick — the math pushes most people either down to the interior or up to the balcony.


Balcony Cabins

The best value on the ship — full stop.

The balcony is where most cruisers should land, and the reason is the spread. At a typical $346/night, it sits only about $45 above the interior.

Our scoring algorithm gives below-market balconies a value bonus precisely because this upgrade so often overpays — but Legend's gap is small enough to be a genuine bargain.

Balcony metricValue
Typical fare$346/night
Lowest tracked$196/night
Highest tracked$635/night
A fair price (7-night)$321/night or below

Over a 7-night sailing, the balcony costs about $315 per person more than the interior — for the whole week, not per night. In exchange, you get a private deck and a window every morning.

The call: book the balcony. On a ship this new, the small premium for outdoor space is the easiest upgrade decision in the lineup. If you're seeing a balcony at $321/night or below, that's a genuinely good price worth acting on.


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Suites

The one room tier where Legend isn't the priciest new Royal Caribbean ship.

A standard suite runs a typical $490/night. We show the median only here, because the raw range is skewed by a handful of specialty categories — two-story townhouses and the largest accommodations on board — that would mislead more than inform.

The skeptic's question on any new ship is whether the suite premium is worth it. On Legend, the more surprising answer is that suites are her most reasonably priced tier relative to her siblings.

Ship (7-night suite)Typical fare
Star of the Seas$511/night
Legend of the Seas$489/night
Icon of the Seas$457/night

Legend's suites land mid-pack — below Star's. That's the opposite of what happens with her standard cabins, where Legend leads the Icon-class field.

The call: if a suite is what you're after, Legend's newness doesn't cost you the way it does on interior, oceanview, and balcony rooms. Just confirm you're pricing a standard suite, not a specialty category — those climb fast and skew every "starting at" number you'll see.


Legend of the Seas Suite Categories

Legend shares Icon and Star's suite lineup — three tiers, from a Coastal Kitchen seat to a Royal Genie.

As an Icon-class ship, Legend carries the same suite architecture as Icon and Star: more than 20 accommodation types, grouped into three benefit tiers. Our tracking covers the standard suite — a typical $490/night — while the named categories below climb well beyond it.

TierSuite categoriesWhat sets it apart
Star ClassUltimate Family Townhouse, Royal Loft, Icon LoftRoyal Genie service, specialty dining, drinks and WiFi included
Sky ClassOwner's, Grand, Infinite Grand, Sunset, Sunset Corner, Sky JuniorConcierge, Coastal Kitchen and Suite Lounge access, WiFi
Sea ClassPanoramic, Surfside Family, Sunset Junior, JuniorSuite-level room with Coastal Kitchen dining

The headline category is the Ultimate Family Townhouse — a three-level Star Class suite with private Surfside access, an indoor dry slide, a cinema room, and karaoke. It's also exactly the kind of specialty suite that pushes the tracked suite range above $5,000/night, which is why we price the standard suite separately.

The call: use our $490/night median as the benchmark for a standard suite — Junior, Panoramic, or Grand. Step up to a named Star Class category and you're in a different price tier entirely. Since Legend's categories are identical to her sisters', the closest price reference is our Icon of the Seas suite breakdown.


How the Spread Compares to Icon and Star

Legend's tight interior-to-balcony gap holds across the Icon-class field — but her overall prices sit on top.

Icon, Star, and Legend are near-identical ships scored on the same methodology — each measured against its own baseline, never blended. That makes a true like-for-like room comparison possible. The table below uses 7-night sailings for the cleanest read.

ShipInteriorOceanviewBalconySuite
Legend of the Seas$270/night$299/night$321/night$489/night
Icon of the Seas$225/night$263/night$280/night$457/night
Star of the Seas$225/night$261/night$287/night$511/night

On standard rooms, Legend leads — her 7-night interior runs about $45/night above both Icon and Star. That's the inaugural premium for the newest hull, and it shows up on interior, oceanview, and balcony alike.

What carries across all three ships is the tight upgrade ladder. The interior-to-balcony step stays modest on every Icon-class ship — the balcony is the value sweet spot fleet-wide, not just on Legend.

We go deeper on whether Legend's newness justifies the premium in our Legend vs Star vs Icon comparison. For the existing siblings, see our Icon vs Star of the Seas price comparison.


Which Room Is the Best Value

The balcony, by a clear margin — then it comes down to budget versus open-air space.

Across every room type, the balcony delivers the most for the money on Legend. The $45/night step over the interior is small enough that the window and deck space pay for themselves.

Here's the honest read by room type, with the fair-price threshold for each:

What a Fair Price Looks Like by Room

  • Balcony — the value pick: a fair price is $321/night or below. The best room on the ship for the money.
  • Interior — the budget pick: a fair price is $270/night or below. Where the rare deep discounts land first.
  • Oceanview — skip it: usually priced within $26/night of the balcony, so the upgrade almost always wins.
  • Suite — the surprise: Legend's most reasonably priced tier relative to Icon and Star. Confirm it's a standard suite.

Now that you've settled on a room, the next question is timing it. We break down the pre-launch price curve — and whether booking now or waiting has paid off — in our guide on when to book Legend of the Seas. For the full picture across cabins, packages, and the inaugural-premium question, start with our Legend of the Seas pricing guide.


How We Track This Data

Every figure in this guide comes from All Aboard Deals' own price tracking. We've monitored 56,297 fares across 224 Legend of the Seas sailings since November 3, 2025 — about 6.5 months of pre-launch history covering 71 inaugural-window sailings between July and December 2026.

Prices are per person, per night, at double occupancy. The cabin medians come from more than 32,000 inaugural-season fares across interior, oceanview, balcony, and suite rooms. Suite figures exclude specialty categories — two-story townhouses and the largest accommodations — that would skew the averages.

Our deal scores compare each fare to a ship-specific baseline: Legend of the Seas measured against Legend of the Seas, never mixed with other ships or generic route averages. As the launch nears and our tracking window grows, we'll update this guide.


Cruise Price Tracker scores every Legend of the Seas fare 0-100 against 2.6M+ tracked price snapshots — so you know whether the room price is fair before you book.

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About the Author

Graham H

Graham H — Founder, All Aboard Deals

Graham has been cruising for over a decade and has sailed on 15+ cruises across Royal Caribbean, Carnival, Norwegian, and Virgin.

He built All Aboard Deals to track cruise prices the same way traders track charts — monitoring 35,000+ sailings and spotting fares that fall well below their recent averages.

When he's not digging through price drops, he's on board testing cabins, checking drink packages, and talking with other cruisers about what actually feels like a good value.

Editorial Standards

All guides are based on real pricing data, live fare checks, and historical trends. Content is updated as ships launch and prices change. Questions or corrections? Contact us

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