The Cruise Capital of the World — 8.56 Million Passengers & the World’s Largest Terminal
From Venture To See — firsthand experiences, traveling with intention.
8 Active Terminals · Know Yours Before You Go8.56M Passengers FY2025 · Record SeasonRoyal Caribbean · MSC · NCL · Carnival · Virgin & MoreTerminal G Under Construction — Not Active Until 2027Use the PortMiami Tunnel · Avoid Port Blvd Bridge
Quick Facts
~8 mi
MIA airport to port
8
active terminals in 2026
$25–$35
per day official port parking
8.56M
passengers FY2025 (record)
Use Tunnel
PortMiami Tunnel · avoid Port Blvd Bridge
The Cruise Capital of the World
PortMiami — The Largest and Busiest Cruise Port on Earth
PortMiami is the uncontested centre of global cruising. In fiscal year 2025, 8,564,225 cruise passengers passed through its terminals — a 4.02% increase over 2024’s record, and the highest annual passenger count in the port’s 57-year history. On November 30, 2025, 75,201 passengers boarded 10 ships in a single day — a new daily record. The port also broke the one-million-passenger-in-a-single-month barrier for the first time, reaching 1,007,325 in November 2025 alone. The port sits on Dodge Island in Biscayne Bay, connected to downtown Miami by the PortMiami Tunnel (from I-395) and the Port Boulevard Bridge. The tunnel is the right way in: it delivers you directly to North Cruise Boulevard, bypassing the downtown traffic that backs up the bridge on busy Saturday mornings.
PortMiami has eight active cruise terminals in 2026 — A, AA, B, C, D, E, F, J, and V. Terminal G is not operational. Construction began on the new Royal Caribbean Group Terminal G in January 2026 and completion is expected in late 2027. Any guide, forum post, or cruise document that lists Terminal G as an embarkation terminal for a 2026 sailing is outdated — ignore it. The port is over two miles long, terminals are separated by significant distances, and arriving at the wrong one on sailing morning is a serious problem. Your cruise line’s booking confirmation or app will state your specific terminal. Confirm it. Navigate to it. Do not assume.
“Miami does not just launch a cruise — it announces one. The skyline behind you, the port ahead, the Caribbean two days away. There is nowhere else in the world where departure feels quite like this.”
⚠ Terminal G Is Under Construction — Not Active Until Late 2027
Construction began on Royal Caribbean Group’s new $345 million Terminal G on January 7, 2026. The facility is designed for Icon-class ships (7,000+ passengers) and includes multi-level parking, an intermodal transport facility, and ship-handling infrastructure. It is not an active embarkation terminal in 2026. Older websites, cruise forums, and some printed materials still reference Terminal G for Royal Caribbean — that information is obsolete. Royal Caribbean passengers use Terminal A (and in some cases Terminal C) in 2026. If your documents say Terminal G, contact your cruise line to confirm the correct terminal.
Know Your Terminal
PortMiami’s Eight Active Terminals — 2026
The port is more than two miles long. Terminals on the east end (A, AA, B) are a significant drive from terminals on the west end (V). The PortMiami Tunnel drops you near the centre of the port on North Cruise Boulevard — from there, follow the signs to your specific terminal letter. Always give your driver, GPS, or rideshare app the terminal letter and the garage address, not just “PortMiami.”
Terminal A — The Crown of Miami
Royal Caribbean exclusively · 170,000 sq ft · LEED Silver · Opened 2018
A
LinesRoyal Caribbean International exclusively · Icon of the Seas · Star of the Seas · Symphony · Allure · Wonder · Freedom-class
Size170,000 sq ft · Two peaks designed to resemble passing ships · Expedited international guest security
ParkingGarage A at 2000 N Cruise Blvd · Managed by Royal Miami Parking (not standard county rate) · $35/day · Premium rate
NoteIcon of the Seas homeport · Alternating 7-night Eastern and Western Caribbean year-round
Terminal AA — MSC Mega-Terminal
World’s largest cruise terminal · 490,000 sq ft · 4 levels · Opened 2025
ParkingGarage AA at 2200 N Cruise Blvd · $35/day · Premium rate · MSC also provides free shuttle from Garage AA to Terminal C parking for overflow
NoteLargest cruise terminal on Earth · Opened fully operational April 2025 · MSC World America LNG-powered · also services MSC from Terminal C overflow
Terminal B — The Pearl of Miami
Norwegian Cruise Line exclusively · 190,000 sq ft · Opened 2020
B
LinesNorwegian Cruise Line exclusively · Norwegian Luna (debut March 2026) · Norwegian Encore & others
Size190,000 sq ft · 2 berths · Up to 5,000 passengers per berth · Inaugurated Feb 2020 with Norwegian Encore
ParkingGarage B at 1756 N Cruise Blvd · $35/day · Premium rate · adjacent to terminal
NoteNorwegian Luna debuts Miami homeporting March 2026 · 3,571 passengers · NCL’s newest ship
Terminal C — Disney & MSC Overflow
Disney Cruise Line · MSC overflow · Holland America (some) · Flexible use
C
LinesDisney Cruise Line (primary) · MSC Cruises (overflow from AA) · Holland America (some sailings) · Flexible assignment
ParkingGarage C at 1648 N Cruise Blvd · $25/day · Standard rate · MSC runs free shuttle from AA passengers to C garage
NoteAssignment varies by sailing — always confirm terminal in your cruise line documents before travelling
Terminals D, E & F — Carnival Complex
Carnival · Holland America · Princess · LEED Silver · Renovated 2022
D/E/F
LinesCarnival Cruise Line (D, E, F) · Holland America (D, E) · Princess Cruises (D, E) · Oceania (E, some sailings)
Key ShipsCarnival Celebration · Carnival Mardi Gras · Holland America Zuiderdam (new 2025–26 homeport) · Princess seasonal
ParkingGarages D, E, F · $25/day standard · Surface Lot E also available for oversized vehicles · Shared cluster
NoteLEED Silver certified · Renovated F in 2022 · Largest Carnival complex in the world · Confirm your specific letter (D, E, or F) in documents
LinesRegent Seven Seas · Oceania Cruises (Allura, new 2025–26) · Cunard Queen Elizabeth (first Florida/Caribbean season 2025–26) · Small luxury vessels
SizeBoutique scale · Designed for smaller ships and luxury itineraries · Personal service atmosphere
ParkingGarage J · $25/day · Standard rate · Books up fastest during peak luxury cruise season — reserve early
NoteCunard Queen Elizabeth making first-ever Florida & Caribbean season in 2025–26 · Oceania Allura new ship debut · VTS affiliate Silversea also uses this area for some sailings
Terminal V — Virgin Voyages
Virgin Voyages exclusively · 100,000 sq ft · Palm-inspired design · Opened 2022
V
LinesVirgin Voyages exclusively · Brilliant Lady (debut Oct 2026) · Scarlet Lady · Valiant Lady
Address718 N Cruise Blvd · Northwest side of port · Note: some older guides incorrectly list this as Terminal E — it is Terminal V
Design100,000 sq ft · Three-story facility · Geometric palm-grove design inspired by Miami’s coconut harvesting history · State of the art
NoteBrilliant Lady debuting Oct 2026 · Adults-only fleet · Vibrant modern interior · Dedicated parking adjacent
Terminal G — Under Construction
NOT active in 2026 · Royal Caribbean Group · $345M · Opens late 2027
G
Status⚠ UNDER CONSTRUCTION · Groundbreaking January 7, 2026 · Not an active embarkation terminal
Future UseRoyal Caribbean Group (Royal Caribbean, Celebrity, Silversea) · Icon-class + large ships · ~7,000 passengers per call
OpensExpected late 2027 · Multi-level parking · Intermodal transport facility · $345 million investment
ActionIf any guide, forum, or document lists Terminal G for your 2026 sailing, contact your cruise line immediately to confirm the correct terminal
ⓘ Terminal Assignments Can Change by Sailing
Even within the same cruise line, terminal assignments at PortMiami can vary by sailing date and ship. A Holland America vessel may use Terminal C for one sailing and Terminal D the next. MSC overflow from Terminal AA may use Terminal C. Always confirm your specific terminal from your cruise line’s booking confirmation, app, or shore-excursion desk in the 48 hours before sailing — not from online guides, which may reflect last season’s assignments.
At a Glance
PortMiami Snapshot — 2025–2026
8.56M
passengers FY2025 (record)
75,201
passengers in one day (Nov 30, 2025)
8
active terminals in 2026
#1
cruise port in the world (historically)
2+ miles
long — navigate to right terminal
Port Address / Tunnel Entry
PortMiami, Dodge Island, Miami, FL 33132 · Enter via I-395 E → PortMiami Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd (recommended) · Avoid Port Blvd Bridge on peak Saturdays
Nearest Airport
Miami International (MIA) · ~8 miles · ~20–30 min · $25–$40 rideshare or taxi · No direct rail to port
Fort Lauderdale (FLL)
~30 miles · ~40–60 min · Rideshare $45–75 · Often cheaper flights than MIA · No direct rail to port
Brightline Train
Connects Miami, Aventura, Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach, Orlando · MiamiCentral station downtown · No direct connection to port — taxi/rideshare final leg ~10 min
Official Parking
miamidade.gov/portmiami · $25–35/day depending on terminal · No advance reservations available · Cash & major credit cards (no debit cards) · Free shuttle on cruise days
Traffic Warning
Carnival, Royal Caribbean, and port officials all warn of 1–2 hr Saturday traffic delays · Port construction + downtown Miami construction compound delays · Use PortMiami Tunnel · Arrive with buffer
Primary Itineraries
Eastern Caribbean · Western Caribbean · Bahamas · Perfect Day at CocoCay · Transatlantic · Panama Canal · World voyages
Guide Verified
May 2026 · Terminal assignments subject to change · Always confirm with cruise line before travel
Ships Departing From Miami
Homeport Cruise Lines — 2025–2026 Season
Cruise Line
Key Ships 2025–26
Itineraries
Terminal
Royal Caribbean VTS Affiliate · World’s largest ships
Icon of the Seas, Star of the Seas, Symphony, Allure, Wonder, Freedom, Independence of the Seas Icon & Star: alternating 7-night Eastern & Western Caribbean
Eastern Caribbean · Western Caribbean · Bahamas · Perfect Day at CocoCay
Terminal A Crown of Miami
MSC Cruises World’s largest private cruise line
MSC World America (2025 debut), MSC Grandiosa, MSC Seashore World America: LNG-powered, North American flagship
Eastern Caribbean · Western Caribbean · Bahamas
Terminal AA World’s largest terminal · also Terminal C overflow
Norwegian Cruise Line VTS Affiliate · Freestyle dining
Norwegian Luna (debut March 2026), Norwegian Encore Norwegian Luna: 3,571-passenger newest NCL ship
Eastern Caribbean · Western Caribbean · Bahamas
Terminal B Pearl of Miami
Disney Cruise Line Seasonal · Families
Disney Wish, Disney Fantasy, Disney Dream Multiple ships seasonal winter deployments
Bahamas · Eastern Caribbean · Private island (Castaway Cay)
Terminal C
Carnival Cruise Line VTS Affiliate · Largest fleet
Eastern Caribbean · Southern Caribbean · Panama Canal
Terminal D/E
Virgin Voyages Adults-only · Modern luxury
Brilliant Lady (debut Oct 2026), Scarlet Lady, Valiant Lady Brilliant Lady: Miami debut Oct 2026
Caribbean · Bahamas · Mexico
Terminal V 718 N Cruise Blvd
Cunard First Florida/Caribbean season 2025–26
Queen Elizabeth First-ever Florida homeporting for Cunard
Caribbean · Bahamas · Transatlantic
Terminal J
Oceania · Regent Seven Seas VTS Affiliate · Luxury
Oceania Allura (new 2025–26), Oceania Marina · Regent Seven Seas Grandeur Allura: newest Oceania ship
Caribbean · South America · World voyages
Terminal J
★ VTS Perspective
Miami is the port where scale becomes visceral. Standing on the Embarcadero at Terminal A and looking at Icon of the Seas — a vessel larger than most buildings — moored beside Star of the Seas while another six ships fill the port on the same Saturday morning is a genuinely staggering sight. The city behind the port matches the ambition: Wynwood Walls, Little Havana, South Beach, the Design District, and the Everglades all within reach for a pre-cruise stay. Arrive the night before sailing, full stop. Saturday morning traffic from Miami hotels to the port can take as long as from many airports. The city rewards the time you give it. Then board, clear Biscayne Bay, and watch the Miami skyline recede behind you. There are few better departure views in the world.
Climate & Packing
Monthly Weather — Miami, Florida
Miami has a tropical monsoon climate — warm to hot year-round, with a pronounced wet season from May through October and a dry season from November through April. The cruise season aligns almost perfectly with Miami’s most comfortable weather: November through April is sunny, drier, and cooler (though never cold). Temperatures in December and January average 76–78°F with low humidity — genuinely pleasant for outdoor city exploration before boarding. The critical planning element is the same as Galveston: hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with peak risk in August and September. Miami’s tropical afternoon thunderstorms are a regular occurrence from May through October — brief, intense, and usually over within 30 minutes. The defining summer weather experience is stepping from 95°F humid heat into ferociously air-conditioned terminals — carry a layer for the interior and your insect repellent for any outdoor time.
☀️ Winter — Dec to Feb
VTS Top Pick
Miami at its most liveable. Sunny, warm, and dry.
December–February averages 76–79°F with low humidity and almost no rain. The city is electric with Art Basel in December, Miami Open in March, and a constant flow of people escaping cold climates. Best weather for pre-cruise city exploring. Book hotels early — winter is peak season.
🌸 Spring — Mar to May
Excellent Conditions
Warm, still dry, heating up by May.
March and April are excellent: 80–84°F, low humidity, beautiful for South Beach and Wynwood exploring. May begins the humidity climb and occasional afternoon storms. Still very comfortable for city days. Spring break in March brings crowds and higher hotel prices.
⚠ Summer — Jun to Sep
Hot, humid, stormy, and hurricane season.
June–September: 90–92°F with high humidity. Daily afternoon thunderstorms. Peak hurricane risk August–September. Miami ports through these months at full capacity — weekend traffic compound by heat, rain, and port construction. Carry rain gear, insect repellent, and travel insurance with hurricane coverage.
🍂 Fall — Oct to Nov
Good Value Window
Cooling, drying, and still hurricane-aware.
October begins the transition: storms become less frequent, humidity drops, temperatures ease toward 85°F. Hurricane risk eases from October but the season runs until November 30. November is beautiful — 79°F, low humidity, and fewer tourists than December onwards. Good value month with excellent weather.
Month
Avg High
Avg Low
Rain Days
Humidity
Cruise Traveller Note
January
76°F / 24°C
61°F / 16°C
6
71%
Best weather month. Sunny and comfortable. Art Basel energy still in the air. Light jacket for evenings. Busiest winter cruise departures. Pre-book hotels and parking well ahead.
February
78°F / 26°C
63°F / 17°C
5
70%
Second driest month. Excellent city exploring weather. Miami Open Tennis from late February. Ideal for Wynwood Walls, Little Havana, and South Beach on foot.
March
80°F / 27°C
66°F / 19°C
5
69%
Spring break crowds mid-month. Warm and sunny. Excellent pre-cruise weather. Ultrabeach Music Festival brings crowds and traffic — check event calendar if sailing in late March.
April
83°F / 28°C
69°F / 21°C
6
68%
VTS spring sweet spot. Low humidity, warm sunshine, fewer spring break crowds. Excellent for outdoor Miami before boarding. Ultra Music Festival in late March sometimes spills into April calendar.
May
87°F / 31°C
73°F / 23°C
10
72%
Heating up. Humidity increasing. Afternoon thunderstorms beginning. Still manageable. Light rain gear useful. Hurricane season begins June 1.
June
90°F / 32°C
76°F / 24°C
15
76%
⚠ Hurricane season begins. Hot, humid, daily afternoon thunderstorms. Moisture-wicking clothing essential. Keep trip insurance in day bag. PortMiami operates at full capacity regardless of weather.
July
91°F / 33°C
77°F / 25°C
16
76%
⚠⚠ Peak heat and rain. Daily storms ~3–5 PM. Embarkation morning at port fully exposed to humidity and sun. Arrive at your time slot — outdoor waiting in July Miami is severe. Travel insurance mandatory.
August
92°F / 33°C
77°F / 25°C
17
77%
⚠⚠ Hottest & wettest month. Peak hurricane risk. Heat index can exceed 105°F. Monitor nhc.noaa.gov. Carnival has issued explicit traffic warnings for August Miami sailing days. Allow 2 hrs extra.
September
91°F / 33°C
76°F / 25°C
17
78%
⚠⚠ Peak hurricane risk continues. Second wettest month. Some of Miami’s most dramatic tropical storms. Travel insurance with hurricane coverage is non-negotiable. Check nhc.noaa.gov daily in the week before sailing.
October
87°F / 31°C
72°F / 22°C
13
74%
⚠ Hurricane risk easing but season runs to Nov 30. Temperatures and humidity dropping noticeably. Good value cruises. Art Basel preparation begins in the city. Manageable pre-cruise day weather.
November
82°F / 28°C
67°F / 19°C
7
70%
Hurricane season ends Nov 30. Beautiful warm-dry weather returns. Art Basel Miami Beach in early December builds excitement. Excellent value month. Miami at a comfortable sweet spot.
December
79°F / 26°C
64°F / 18°C
6
70%
Art Basel Miami Beach (early Dec). Perfect weather. Peak hotel season begins. Festive waterfront atmosphere. Light jacket for evenings on the bay. Most popular cruise departure month — book all logistics early.
🌩 Hurricane Season — June 1 to November 30 · Miami Is Not Galveston But Risk Is Real
Miami does not sit on a low-lying barrier island like Galveston, but it is fully within the Atlantic hurricane zone. Major storms have struck South Florida throughout history, and tropical systems regularly affect the port schedule. Cruise lines will cancel, reroute, or delay sailings when tropical threats develop — they will typically offer credit or refund, but your hotel, parking, and flights are your responsibility without insurance. If sailing June through November from Miami: comprehensive travel insurance with hurricane and weather coverage is required, not optional. Monitor the NOAA National Hurricane Center at nhc.noaa.gov in the 7 days before any summer or autumn sailing.
ⓘ Summer Saturday Mornings — The Compound Problem
On peak summer Saturdays at PortMiami, three factors compound: (1) 7–10 ships departing simultaneously; (2) ongoing port construction and downtown Miami roadway projects creating 1–2 hour traffic delays; (3) extreme heat and humidity for any outdoor queuing. Carnival Cruise Line has explicitly warned passengers about Saturday traffic delays. Royal Caribbean, Norwegian, and MSC have also cautioned guests. In July and August: plan for 2 hours of travel time from any Miami hotel to the terminal, arrive at your allocated boarding slot rather than early, have water and sun protection in your day bag, and stay in an Embarcadero or Brickell hotel within 10 minutes of the port.
What to Pack for Miami
Tropical Packing by Season
☀️ Winter & Spring (Dec–Apr) — Ideal
✓Light summer clothes for daytime — 76–84°F and sunny
✓Light jacket or cardigan for evenings on the bay and air-conditioned restaurants
✓Sunscreen SPF 50+ — UV index is high year-round in Miami
✓Sunglasses and hat for any outdoor waterfront time
⚠ Summer (Jun–Sep) — Hot & Rainy
✓Moisture-wicking lightweight clothing — cotton is miserable in Miami humidity
✓Compact waterproof — daily afternoon thunderstorms, usually brief
✓Insect repellent — mosquitoes after rain events
✓Travel insurance with hurricane coverage — in your day bag, not your checked luggage
✓Water bottle — embarkation morning heat is extreme
🌴 Eastern & Western Caribbean Sailings
✓Reef-safe sunscreen — required in many Caribbean protected waters
✓US dollars (small bills) for port tips and smaller vendors
✓Water shoes for beach and snorkel excursions
✓Formal wear if sailing with Cunard, Oceania, or Regent — check dress code
🏛️ Terminal Embarkation Day
✓Light layer for terminal interior — A/C at Terminal A and AA is ferocious in summer
✓Boarding pass in phone app, passport accessible in day bag
✓Medications and change of clothes in carry-on — checked bags arrive in cabin by evening
✓Portable phone charger — useful during waits in any weather
★ VTS Best Time to Sail From Miami
December through February is our top window: Miami weather at its finest, the city at its most vibrant, and the Caribbean destinations equally perfect. January is the sweet spot — Art Basel energy has faded, prices ease slightly from December, and the weather is reliably excellent. November is the best value month: hurricane season ends, weather is beautiful, and hotel rates are below December peaks. Avoid July, August, and September unless your schedule requires it — the combination of extreme heat, daily storms, hurricane risk, and compound port traffic delays makes these the most difficult months at PortMiami. If you must sail in summer, buy the insurance before anything else.
Getting to Miami
Airports, the Tunnel & Ground Transport
PortMiami sits on Dodge Island in Biscayne Bay, connected to the mainland by two routes: the PortMiami Tunnel (the right way in) and the Port Boulevard Bridge (the route to avoid on busy Saturday mornings). The tunnel connects I-395 directly to North Cruise Boulevard inside the port, bypassing downtown Miami entirely. On peak embarkation Saturdays, traffic on the Port Boulevard Bridge can add 30–90 minutes to your journey. Tell your driver or GPS: PortMiami Tunnel from I-395 East. Miami has two major airports: MIA is closer at 8 miles; FLL (Fort Lauderdale) is 30 miles but often offers cheaper flights and comparable total transfer time.
🚛
Use the PortMiami Tunnel — Always
The PortMiami Tunnel connects I-395 East directly to Dodge Island, delivering you to North Cruise Boulevard at the heart of the port. It bypasses all downtown Miami surface traffic and is specifically recommended by the port and cruise lines over the Port Boulevard Bridge. On peak Saturdays with 7–10 ships in port, the bridge can back up significantly due to port construction and downtown roadway works. Carnival Cruise Line has issued explicit warnings about Saturday traffic delays.
From MIA Airport: FL-836 E → I-395 E → PortMiami Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd
From FLL Airport: I-95 S → Exit 2D toward I-395 E → PortMiami Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd
From Miami Beach / South Beach: MacArthur Cswy → I-395 W → Turn around at Watson Island → take I-395 E back into Tunnel (or Biscayne Blvd south to Port Blvd)
Miami International Airport
Closest airport · VTS Recommended for PortMiami
MIA
Distance to port~8 miles · ~20–30 min
Taxi / rideshare$25–$40 · Uber and Lyft both available
Taxi flat rate~$35 flat rate to PortMiami (negotiate before)
Public transitMetrorail Orange Line → Government Center → Metromover → Freedom Tower → Trolley to port · ~45–60 min · Not practical with luggage
Best approachRideshare or taxi via I-836 E to I-395 E to Tunnel
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International
~30 miles · Often cheaper flights · Brightline option
FLL
Distance to port~30 miles · ~40–60 min (allow 90 in peak traffic)
Rideshare cost$45–$75 depending on surge and traffic
Shared shuttle~$25–$40 per person · pre-book online
Brightline trainFLL → Fort Lauderdale station → Miami Central · ~40 min · From ~$20 · Then taxi/rideshare ~10 min to port
Often cheaperSouthwest, Spirit, and ultra-low-cost carriers use FLL heavily — compare total cost including transfer
🚋
Brightline — High-Speed Rail from Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach & Orlando
Brightline connects downtown Miami (MiamiCentral station, 600 NW 1st Ave) with Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, West Palm Beach, Aventura, and Orlando International Airport. If you are arriving by Brightline, MiamiCentral is approximately 10 minutes by taxi or rideshare from PortMiami (~$12–18). Not walkable with cruise luggage. Brightline also provides the best option for passengers flying into FLL who want to avoid the I-95 drive: FLL Airport Shuttle Bus to Fort Lauderdale Brightline station → train to MiamiCentral → taxi to terminal. Total time: approximately 50–70 minutes. From ~$20–30 for the train portion. Book at gobrightline.com.
Navigate to the Right Terminal
Garage Addresses — Enter These in Your GPS App
A
Garage A · Royal Caribbean
2000 N Cruise Blvd Miami, FL 33132
$35/day · Royal Miami Parking
AA
Garage AA · MSC Cruises
2200 N Cruise Blvd Miami, FL 33132
$35/day · World’s largest terminal
B
Garage B · Norwegian
1756 N Cruise Blvd Miami, FL 33132
$35/day · Pearl of Miami
C
Garage C · Disney · MSC overflow
1648 N Cruise Blvd Miami, FL 33132
$25/day · Standard rate
D–F
Garages D/E/F · Carnival Complex
Follow PortMiami signs to your letter · South side of port
$25/day · Confirm D, E, or F in documents
J
Garage J · Luxury / Boutique
South side of port · Follow PortMiami J signs
$25/day · Regent · Oceania · Cunard
V
Terminal V · Virgin Voyages
718 N Cruise Blvd Miami, FL 33132
Northwest side of port · NOT Terminal E
G
Terminal G · CLOSED IN 2026
Under construction · Opens 2027
If docs say G → call your cruise line now
All Your Options
Getting from Airport or Hotel to PortMiami
📱
Uber or Lyft
MIA or hotel to terminal · both available at PortMiami
$25–$75
⏱ ~20–60 min depending on airport and traffic
Both Uber and Lyft operate freely at PortMiami (unlike Galveston). Enter your specific terminal garage address, not just “PortMiami”. Ask driver to use the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395. On peak Saturday mornings, request early — surge pricing applies when demand spikes. Lyft XL or Uber XL for groups with large luggage.
Best for: Most passengers · quickest option from MIA
🚕
Taxi
MIA to PortMiami · flat rate available
~$35–$45
⏱ ~20–30 min from MIA in normal traffic
Miami taxis offer a flat rate from MIA to PortMiami — confirm the flat rate before departure. Meter rates can run higher in traffic. Yellow Cab and SOBE taxi have set rates. Give driver your terminal letter and garage address. Ask for the Tunnel route. Taxis queue at all MIA terminals at the ground transport level.
Best for: Predictable pricing · no-app option
🚌
Shared Shuttle Service
MIA or FLL to terminal · per person pricing
$18–$40 per person
⏱ ~30–60 min · may stop at multiple hotels
Shared shuttle companies including SuperShuttle alternatives, Go Airport Shuttle, and cruise line transfer buses run from both MIA and FLL. Per-person pricing makes this cost-effective for solo travellers. Pre-book online. Slower than private options as the van collects multiple passengers. Allow extra time. Cruise lines also offer their own transfer programmes from both airports.
Best for: Solo travellers · budget-conscious
🚗
Pre-Booked Private Transfer
Fixed price · MIA, FLL, or hotel direct to terminal
$60–$150+
⏱ ~20–60 min · fixed pricing · no surge
Pre-booked car or SUV with fixed pricing, luggage assistance, and a driver who will navigate the tunnel route. Best value for groups of 3–4 passengers from FLL. Particularly recommended on peak Saturdays when Uber/Lyft surge pricing can spike significantly. Give the company your terminal letter and garage address in advance.
Best for: Groups · FLL arrivals · peak Saturdays
🚋
Brightline + Taxi
FLL or Orlando → MiamiCentral → short taxi
From ~$30
⏱ ~50–70 min from FLL · ~4 hrs from Orlando via train
Brightline train to MiamiCentral (600 NW 1st Ave, downtown Miami) then taxi or rideshare ~10 min to PortMiami (~$12–18). Best option for FLL passengers who want to avoid I-95 traffic. Also excellent for passengers from Boca Raton and West Palm Beach. Book at gobrightline.com — trains run frequently throughout the day.
Best for: FLL · Boca · West Palm · Orlando arrivals
🚘
Driving Your Own Car
I-395 E → PortMiami Tunnel → terminal
Fuel + $25–$35/day
⏱ I-395 E → Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd · well-signed
Use the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395 — do not rely on GPS default which may send you via Port Boulevard Bridge. Navigate to your specific garage address (see above). Drop bags with porters at the terminal kerb before driving to the garage. On-site official parking at $25–35/day depending on terminal. No advance reservations — arrive early on peak Saturdays as lots fill.
Best for: Florida residents · off-season weekdays
⚠ No Direct Public Transit from Either Airport to PortMiami
There is no practical direct rail or bus link from MIA or FLL to PortMiami for cruise passengers with luggage. The Metrorail/Metromover/Trolley combination from MIA takes 45–60 minutes and requires multiple transfers — it is not designed for luggage-carrying cruise passengers. Brightline from FLL to MiamiCentral is the best public transit option, followed by a 10-minute taxi. For all other passengers: rideshare, taxi, or pre-booked private transfer via the PortMiami Tunnel route.
★ VTS Transport Recommendation
Stay in a hotel within 10 minutes of the port (Brickell, Downtown Miami, or near the Bayside Marketplace) and take an Uber to your terminal on sailing morning. Tell the driver your terminal letter and garage address, and ask for the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395. For passengers flying into FLL: Brightline to MiamiCentral and then taxi is excellent — it avoids I-95 traffic completely. For passengers flying into MIA: taxi with a flat rate or rideshare is the simplest option, 20–30 minutes with the tunnel. On peak summer Saturdays: allow 90 minutes from any hotel, even those close to the port.
Parking
On-Site Port Parking — Two Rate Tiers, No Advance Reservations
PortMiami offers secure, on-site parking at every active terminal through garages and surface lots operated by Miami-Dade County and terminal operators. There are two rate tiers: $35/day for the premium dedicated terminals (A, AA, B — Royal Caribbean, MSC, Norwegian), and $25/day for the standard terminals (C, D, E, F, J — Carnival complex, Disney, Luxury). No advance reservations are available for official PortMiami parking — parking is first-come, first-served on sailing day. This makes early arrival important on peak Saturdays when 7–10 ships may depart simultaneously. Off-site alternatives with advance booking are available from around $8–15/day with shuttle service.
Premium Rate Garages — $35/day
Terminals A, AA, B · Newest dedicated facilities
$35/day
Garage A2000 N Cruise Blvd · Royal Caribbean Terminal A (Crown of Miami) · Managed by Royal Miami Parking (not county standard rate) · $35/day
Garage AA2200 N Cruise Blvd · MSC Cruises Terminal AA (world’s largest terminal) · $35/day · MSC provides free shuttle to Terminal C parking as overflow
Garage B1756 N Cruise Blvd · Norwegian Cruise Line Terminal B (Pearl of Miami) · $35/day · Adjacent to terminal
No reservationsAll premium garages are first-come, first-served · Arrive early on peak Saturdays · Cash and major credit cards (no debit)
Garage C1648 N Cruise Blvd · Serves Disney · MSC overflow · Holland America · $25/day
Garages D, E, FCarnival complex · South side of port · Shared cluster · $25/day · Surface Lot E also available for oversized vehicles at $25/space occupied
Garage JBoutique terminal · Regent, Oceania, Cunard, luxury lines · $25/day · Fills fastest during luxury cruise season — arrive early
Free shuttleComplimentary shuttle service between garages and terminals runs on all cruise days
Complete Parking Reference
All Garages — Rate, Cruise Line & Address
Term.
Garage Address
Rate/Day
Cruise Line(s)
Notes
A
2000 N Cruise Blvd
$35
Royal Caribbean (exclusively)
Crown of Miami · Managed by Royal Miami Parking · Icon + Star of the Seas
AA
2200 N Cruise Blvd
$35
MSC Cruises · Explora Journeys
World’s largest terminal · Free MSC shuttle to Garage C for overflow · Biometric boarding
B
1756 N Cruise Blvd
$35
Norwegian Cruise Line (exclusively)
Pearl of Miami · Norwegian Luna debuting March 2026 · 190,000 sq ft
C
1648 N Cruise Blvd
$25
Disney · MSC overflow · Holland America
Flexible assignment — confirm your terminal in documents · MSC overflow shuttle from AA
D/E/F
South side of port — follow signs
$25
Carnival (D/E/F) · Holland America (D/E) · Princess (D/E) · Oceania (E)
LEED Silver · Largest Carnival complex globally · Surface Lot E oversized vehicles · Confirm your letter
J
South side of port — follow signs
$25
Regent Seven Seas · Oceania · Cunard Queen Elizabeth · Luxury/boutique
Smallest lot · Books up fastest in peak luxury season · Arrive early on luxury ship sailing days
V
718 N Cruise Blvd
$25
Virgin Voyages (exclusively)
Northwest side of port · NOT Terminal E · Brilliant Lady debuts Oct 2026
G
Under construction
N/A
NOT ACTIVE IN 2026
⚠ Demolition Jan 2026 · Opens late 2027 · Royal Caribbean Group future terminal · If docs say G: call cruise line
⏱ Official Parking Cost — 7-Night Caribbean Cruise
7
nights · Premium Garage (A, AA, or B) · Royal Caribbean, MSC, or Norwegian · $35/day
$245
7
nights · Standard Garage (C, D, E, F, or J) · Carnival, Disney, Luxury · $25/day
$175
7
nights · Off-site with shuttle (e.g. Park N Go, Cruiseport Miami) · ~$8–15/day
~$56–$105
7
nights · Hotel park-and-cruise package (1 night + 7 days parking + shuttle)
Compare — often best total value
▶
No advance reservations at official garages · Cash or major credit cards only (no debit)
First-come
Budget Alternatives
Off-Site Parking — Save Up to 70% with Shuttle
Private · All Terminals · Shuttle
Cruiseport Miami Parking
From ~$8/day · pre-book online
One of the most-used off-site options for PortMiami — secure, fenced compound with CCTV and free shuttle to all terminals. Pre-book online for best rates. Allow 30–45 minutes for shuttle on busy Saturday mornings. Rates vary by date — holiday and peak sailings book at higher rates.
Private · Multiple Locations · Pre-Book
SpotHero / Parkopedia / ParkWhiz
From ~$9/day · varies by proximity
Apps and websites that aggregate parking near PortMiami. Some lots are very close to the port tunnel entrance — filter by shuttle service. Always verify: CCTV, 24/7 security, physical address verifiable on maps, and genuine recent reviews. Pre-booking locks in lower rates than walk-up.
Hotel Package · All Terminals
Hotel Park-and-Cruise Packages
Compare rates · often best total value
Many Miami hotels near the port (InterContinental, JW Marriott, Hampton Inn Blue Lagoon near MIA) offer packages combining one overnight stay with multi-day cruise parking and a shuttle to the terminal. If arriving the night before (which VTS recommends), calculate: hotel room + parking separately vs. the package total. For 7-night cruises the package almost always wins.
📅
No Advance Reservations at Port
Official PortMiami garages do not accept advance reservations. Parking is first-come, first-served. On peak Saturdays with 8–10 ships, premium garages (A, AA, B) can fill quickly. Arrive early or use pre-bookable off-site alternatives.
💳
No Debit Cards Accepted
Official PortMiami parking accepts cash, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, and US Traveler’s Checks only. Debit cards are not accepted. Have a credit card or cash ready for the garage exit machine.
🏟
Drop Bags Before Parking
Pull to the terminal kerb first and drop all checked bags with porters (tip $1–2/bag), then drive to your garage. This is especially important at Terminal A and AA where the garage is adjacent to the terminal but still requires a short walk.
🚗
Oversized Vehicles — Surface Lot E
RVs, oversized vans, or vehicles with trailers must use Surface Lot E (open-air, near the Carnival terminal cluster). Rate is $25 per space occupied per day — an oversized vehicle taking two spaces pays $50/day. No covered parking available for oversized vehicles.
🚕
Free Shuttle on Cruise Days
PortMiami operates complimentary shuttle service between all garages and terminals on cruise days. Useful if your garage is not immediately adjacent to your terminal. MSC also runs its own free shuttle between Terminal AA and Garage C for passengers using overflow parking.
🛡️
Verify Off-Site Lots Carefully
PortMiami generates significant off-site parking demand and some providers are more reliable than others. Always verify: Park Mark or equivalent accreditation, verifiable physical address, CCTV, 24/7 attended security, cancellation policy, and recent third-party reviews before booking any lot that is not the official port garage.
★ VTS Parking Recommendation
For most passengers: use official port parking for convenience and security despite the premium. Navigate to your specific garage address using the PortMiami Tunnel route. Drop bags at the terminal kerb before parking. Have a credit card ready — no debit cards. For budget-conscious passengers doing a 7-night cruise: off-site at $8–15/day saves $100–175 over official rates — worth the 20-minute shuttle if you pre-book a reputable provider. For passengers arriving the night before (which VTS recommends): compare hotel park-and-cruise packages first. The InterContinental, Hampton Inn Blue Lagoon (near MIA), and several Brickell properties offer packages that beat paying for hotel and port parking separately.
Embarkation Day
Sailing Day at PortMiami — Scale, Traffic & What to Expect
PortMiami on a peak Saturday is unlike any other cruise embarkation in the world. Ten ships may be turning around simultaneously, 70,000+ passengers moving through the terminals, and construction on Port Boulevard compounding the traffic. The two non-negotiable rules: use the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395, and arrive at your assigned boarding window — not earlier. Royal Caribbean requires check-in to be completed in the Royal App at least 3 days before sailing; those who skip app check-in must arrive at the pier at least two hours before the published sailing time. Carnival checked baggage service closes 2 hours before the ship’s published departure time; guests arriving after this must carry bags onboard themselves. Every line uses staggered windows. Find yours in your cruise line’s app 14–21 days before sailing.
Royal Caribbean App Check-In
3 days before
Or arrive 2 hrs early at pier
Boarding Generally Opens
~11:30 AM
When previous cruise clears customs
Carnival Bag Drop Cutoff
2 hrs before
After this: carry bags yourself
All Aboard Cutoff
90 min before
All lines · no exceptions
Typical Departure
4:00–5:00 PM
Most Miami sailings
By Cruise Line
Embarkation Notes — Line by Line
Line
Check-In System
Terminal
Key Note
Royal Caribbean
Royal App · arrival time slot selected during check-in · check-in opens 48 hrs before sailing
Terminal A (Crown of Miami)
Complete Royal App check-in at least 3 days before · arrive in your slot — early arrivals cannot board · all aboard 90 min before sailing · Icon of the Seas: one of the world’s largest embarkations
MSC Cruises
MSC for Me app · staggered boarding windows · 100% biometric boarding at Terminal AA
Terminal AA (MSC Mega-Terminal)
Paperless biometric check-in — world’s most technologically advanced boarding · MSC Voyagers Club priority · confirm whether using Terminal AA or Terminal C overflow in documents
Norwegian Cruise Line
NCL app · check-in at least 4 days before · if not completed: must arrive 2 hrs before sailing
Terminal B (Pearl of Miami)
Norwegian Luna debuts March 2026 at Terminal B · Haven and Suite guests priority boarding · complete digital check-in for earliest window
Disney Cruise Line
Port Arrival Time (PAT) in Disney Cruise Line app · strictly observed
Terminal C
Castaway Club loyalty priority boarding · strict PAT enforcement · all guests including children need full citizenship documents
Carnival Cruise Line
Arrival Appointment in Carnival Hub app · assigned by booking tier
Terminal D, E, or F (confirm in documents)
Checked bag service closes 2 hrs before departure · Lido lunch open from boarding · Confirm your specific terminal letter (D, E, or F) — the Carnival complex has three terminals
Boarding officially opens noon (HAL) · staterooms ready ~1 PM · Suite and loyalty tier priority boarding for both lines · Confirm terminal in documents
Oceania / Regent / Cunard
Personalised boarding time in documents · boutique-scale check-in
Terminal J
Small terminal — efficient and personalised · Cunard Queen Elizabeth: first Florida/Caribbean season · Oceania Allura debut 2025–26 · Dress code enforcement at boarding for Cunard
Virgin Voyages
Virgin Voyages app · Check-In Time selected in app
Terminal V (718 N Cruise Blvd)
Adults-only fleet · Brilliant Lady debuts October 2026 at Terminal V · Vibrant, modern boarding experience · NOT Terminal E — navigate to Terminal V address specifically
Before You Leave for the Terminal
Documents & Embarkation Essentials
📌 Required — Every Passenger
✓Valid US passport — recommended for all passengers on all itineraries · Caribbean closed-loop sailings technically allow birth cert + photo ID but passport strongly recommended in case of emergency requiring air evacuation from foreign port
✓Boarding pass — printed or in cruise line app · online check-in must be completed in advance
✓Credit card for onboard account · pre-register in app where available
✓Travel insurance policy with hurricane coverage (June–Nov sailings: mandatory, not optional)
📱 Digital — Complete Before Leaving Hotel
✓Cruise line app with assigned boarding time visible on boarding pass
✓Royal Caribbean: completed 3+ days before · NCL: 4+ days · Carnival: up to 14 days before, no later than midnight before sailing
✓Terminal letter and garage address confirmed — tell Uber/Lyft/taxi the specific garage address
✓Parking confirmation or hotel park-and-cruise reference
🍰 Day Bag — Never in Checked Luggage
✓All medications — full cruise supply in carry-on
✓Sunscreen & hat — drop-off zones and kerb areas are fully exposed
✓Light layer for terminal interior — Terminal A and AA A/C is intense in summer
✓Water bottle — summer embarkation in Miami heat is serious
✓Change of clothes — checked bags arrive in cabin by early evening
Embarkation Day Timeline
Hotel to Onboard — The Miami Way
1
Morning — Allow More Time Than You Think
Calculate Backwards from Your Boarding Window
Find your assigned boarding time in your cruise line app. On a peak Saturday in summer: add 90 minutes travel time from any Miami hotel to the terminal, even hotels that are technically 10 minutes away. Port construction + downtown Miami roadway works + 7–10 ships turning around = the worst traffic in US cruising. In winter and weekdays: add 30–45 minutes. Always use the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395.
2
Before Leaving Your Hotel
Luggage Tags Attached & App Check-In Complete
Attach cruise line luggage tags to all checked bags before leaving your hotel — not at the kerb. Confirm your terminal letter and garage address in your cruise line documents. Have your boarding pass visible in the app. Tell your Uber/Lyft/taxi driver the specific garage address (e.g. “2000 N Cruise Blvd, Garage A”) and ask for the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395. Do not say just “PortMiami” — the port is over two miles long.
3
At the Terminal Kerb
Drop Bags First — Then Park
Drop all checked bags with porters at the terminal kerb before parking. Tip $1–2 per bag. Bags must have cruise line tags already attached. Keep all medications, valuables, boarding documents, and a change of clothes in your day bag. After bag drop, drive to your designated garage. Free shuttle runs between garages and terminals on cruise days if needed.
4
Inside the Terminal
Security & Check-In — Scale Varies by Terminal
Terminal AA uses 100% biometric paperless boarding — the fastest check-in experience at PortMiami. Terminal A (Royal Caribbean) has an expedited lane for international guests. Terminals D/E/F (Carnival) can have longer queues on peak sailings — the Carnival complex processes the most volume in Miami. All terminals have comfortable air-conditioned waiting areas. Priority boarding lanes for suites, loyalty top tier, and accessibility needs operate at all terminals.
5
Aboard — Go Directly to Food
Lido, Windjammer, or Buffet — Before Cabins Open
Carnival’s Lido Deck lunch opens immediately on boarding. Royal Caribbean’s Windjammer opens simultaneously. Norwegian’s buffet and pool deck open. Staterooms typically ready by 1:00–1:30 PM. Do not queue at your cabin door — drop your day bag and explore the ship. Muster drill (mandatory safety briefing) takes place before or shortly after departure — check your app for time and station.
🌊
4:00–5:00 PM — Be on Deck
Sailaway from Miami — The Biscayne Bay Departure
The departure from Miami is one of the great sailaway experiences in American cruising. The ship navigates out of Dodge Island through the Government Cut channel — the downtown Miami skyline to starboard, South Beach and Fisher Island to port — then into the Atlantic. On Icon of the Seas or Star of the Seas, you are on a vessel taller than most buildings, moving through one of the most dramatic urban waterways on Earth. Be on deck for it. The Caribbean is 15 hours south. The city is behind you. The voyage has begun.
⚠ Peak Saturday Traffic — Plan for It, Not Around It
On peak Saturdays at PortMiami with 7–10 ships departing simultaneously, traffic in and around the port can add 1–2 hours to any journey from Miami hotels. Carnival Cruise Line has explicitly warned its Miami passengers about heavier-than-normal weekend traffic due to high numbers of ships and ongoing construction at the port and in downtown Miami. The correct response is not to leave earlier and arrive before your boarding window opens — it is to stay the night before in a hotel within 10 minutes of the port, use the tunnel route, and accept that your boarding window is the right time to target. Arriving before your slot does not let you board earlier; it only creates an outdoor wait in Miami heat.
Disembarkation Day
Getting Off the Ship at Miami
Ship Returns to Port
Typically 6:00–7:00 AM · exact time in cruise line disembarkation documents or app · clearance takes additional time
US Customs & Border Protection
CBP clears all passengers returning from international ports · facial recognition technology at most terminals · have passport accessible · typically completed before passenger disembarkation begins
Self-Assist Disembarkation
~7:00–7:30 AM · carry all your bags off yourself · first wave off the ship · ideal for early MIA flights (airport only 8 miles / 20 min away)
Wave Group Disembarkation
Colour/number groups called from ~7:30–8:00 AM onwards · bags in baggage hall sorted by tag colour · porters available
Terminal to MIA Airport
Uber or Lyft: ~20–30 min · $25–40 · recommend booking 30 min before you expect to exit the terminal
Terminal to FLL Airport
~45–60 min · $45–75 rideshare · allow extra time during peak traffic hours · Brightline from downtown also viable
Brightline Home
Taxi/rideshare to MiamiCentral station (~10 min / ~$12–18) → Brightline to Fort Lauderdale, Boca, West Palm, or Orlando · book at gobrightline.com · runs throughout the day
Do Not Book Early Flights
For Miami disembarkation days, do not book flights departing before 11:30 AM from MIA or 12:30 PM from FLL · even with self-assist, clearance and transport take time
Terminal Clear By
~10:30–11:00 AM · all guests must be off by this time for ship turnaround
★ VTS Embark Day Recommendation
Stay in Miami the night before sailing — this is non-negotiable at PortMiami. Saturday morning traffic from even close-in hotels can take twice the expected time. Book a hotel in Brickell or Downtown within 10 minutes of the port, have a proper dinner on the waterfront the night before, and wake up with the anxiety of the journey already behind you. On sailing day: confirm your terminal and garage address, use the PortMiami Tunnel from I-395, drop bags at the kerb, park, board at your window. Get to the lido deck the moment the ship is moving. The Miami skyline dropping away behind Icon of the Seas through Government Cut is one of the most dramatic sailaway views in global cruising. Be on deck for it.
The Night Before & The Day Before That
Explore Miami — Arrive Two Days Early and Mean It
Miami is the cruise port that most rewards the extra day. Most passengers fly in, check in, sleep, and board. The ones who stay two nights experience something genuinely different: Wynwood in the early morning before the crowds arrive, café cubano from a Little Havana ventanita, the Vizcaya Museum gardens in the golden hour, a sunset sail across Biscayne Bay with your ship visible in the background, dinner in Brickell with the skyline lit up across the water. The city is not a holding area for your cruise. It is one of the most culturally layered, visually dramatic cities in the United States. Two days minimum. The embarkation logistics are almost irrelevant if you have slept the night before a 10-minute taxi away.
⏰ One Perfect Day in Miami — VTS Pre-Cruise Itinerary
8:00 AM
Wynwood early morning — The murals on NW 2nd Avenue are free and best before 10 AM when crowds arrive. Wynwood Walls ($10–15 admission) for the commissioned inner courtyard, or walk the surrounding blocks for equally impressive free street art. Coffee at Wynwood Brewing or any of the cafés on NW 26th Street.
11:00 AM
Little Havana — Calle Ocho — Uber south to SW 8th Street. Order a café cubano from a ventanita (standing window), watch the domino players at Domino Park (Maximo Gomez Park), buy a cigar from a hand-roller, visit Cubaocho Museum. The cultural heartbeat of Miami.
1:00 PM
Lunch at Versailles Restaurant — 3555 SW 8th Street. The unofficial embassy of Cuban Miami since 1971. Cuban sandwich, ropa vieja, or arroz con pollo. Counter service and a dining room both available. The most important restaurant in Cuban American history. Do not miss it.
2:30 PM
Bayside Marketplace & Biscayne Bay — 401 Biscayne Blvd, directly across from PortMiami. Bay views, outdoor bars, and your cruise ship visible across the water. Take a Biscayne Bay boat tour (1 hour, from ~$25) or simply sit with a drink watching the port. This is the last view of Miami before you board.
5:00 PM
Dinner in Brickell — South Florida’s most polished dining neighbourhood. Dinner at Komodo (modern Asian), Swan (celebrity favourite), or La Mar by Gaston Acurio (Peruvian, waterfront). Brickell City Centre for a browse before dinner. Then back to your hotel — your ship is waiting tomorrow.
Sailing Day
Luggage tags attached · boarding pass in app · Uber to terminal garage address via PortMiami Tunnel — You’ve seen Miami. Now you earn the departure from Government Cut.
Miami Highlights
Pre-Cruise Experiences Worth Your Time
🎨
Wynwood Walls & Street Art District
Art District · VTS Top Pick · Morning Best
What was an industrial warehouse neighbourhood a decade ago is now one of the most visited art districts in the world. Wynwood Walls (inner courtyard, $10–15) features 35+ commissioned murals by international artists. The surrounding blocks on NW 2nd Avenue, 23rd, and 25th Streets are free and equally impressive. Go before 10 AM when crowds are thin. Then Wynwood Brewing for a pint, or craft coffee at Panther Coffee. An hour minimum; most people stay three.
Walls: ~$10–15 · Street art: free · NW 2nd Ave
🎸
Little Havana — Calle Ocho
Cultural District · Cuban Heritage · VTS Essential
The cultural heartbeat of Cuban Miami along SW 8th Street. Café cubano from ventanitas (standing windows), hand-rolled cigars, dominos at Maximo Gomez Park (Domino Park), live salsa at Ball and Chain (no cover, arrive by 9 PM for a seat), and Cubaocho Museum & Performing Arts Center with its extraordinary Cuban art collection. For first-time Miami visitors, this is the neighbourhood that most rewards genuine curiosity over tourist checklist mentality.
✓ Free to explore · Ball & Chain: no cover · SW 8th St
🏛️
South Beach & the Art Deco Historic District
Beach · Architecture · Ocean Drive · 20 min from port
The Art Deco Historic District on Ocean Drive is the most photographed streetscape in Miami — 1930s pastel-coloured hotels, neon signs, and the Atlantic Ocean at the end of every block. Walk Ocean Drive, Collins Avenue, and Washington Avenue. The beach is public and free. Early morning (before 9 AM) is the only way to experience it without overwhelming tourist volume. The Art Deco Welcome Center offers $25 walking tours. Best for a second pre-cruise day — distance from port makes same-day management tighter.
Beach: free · Art Deco tour: $25 · 20–25 min Uber from port
🏞️
Vizcaya Museum & Gardens
Historic Estate · Coconut Grove · Unmissable
The 1916 winter estate of industrialist James Deering — a European-style palazzo and formal Italian gardens on the shore of Biscayne Bay. One of the most beautiful properties in Florida. 34 rooms of European antiques, sculptures, and decorative arts, surrounded by 10 acres of formal and wild gardens. Allow 2–3 hours. The garden terrace with its bay view is one of the most serene spots in Miami. 3251 S Miami Ave, Coconut Grove, about 15 minutes south of downtown.
~$25/adult · 3251 S Miami Ave · vizcaya.org
🚖
Bayside Marketplace & Biscayne Bay Views
Waterfront · Steps from PortMiami · Free to Browse
Directly across Biscayne Boulevard from the port causeway, Bayside Marketplace has waterfront restaurants, bars, souvenir shops, and most importantly: direct views of Biscayne Bay with your cruise ship visible across the water. Best used as a pre-boarding final hour rather than a primary destination. Bay boat tours depart from here (from ~$25, 1 hour). The free Metromover connects Bayside to Brickell, Downtown, and the museum district.
✓ Free to browse · 401 Biscayne Blvd · Steps from port
🚌
Metromover — Free Downtown Loop
Free Automated Rail · Downtown · Brickell · Museum Park
Miami’s free automated elevated rail connects Downtown, Brickell, and Museum Park (Pérez Art Museum Miami, Frost Science Museum) in a continuous loop. Completely free. A low-key way to see the city from above without paying for a tour. From Museum Park, walk along the Biscayne Bay waterfront or visit PAMM (Pérez Art Museum Miami, $20/adult) with its stunning views over the bay. Practical and genuinely enjoyable for an orientation of downtown.
✓ Free · Connects Brickell to Museum Park · runs frequently
🐋
Everglades Airboat Tour
Half-Day from Miami · National Park · Wildlife
The Everglades National Park begins approximately 45 minutes west of downtown Miami. Airboat tours through the sawgrass and mangroves — alligators, roseate spoonbills, anhinga, and the eerie quiet of one of the most unique ecosystems on Earth. Half-day tours from downtown Miami from ~$65–90 including transport. Everglades Adventures, Airboat Tours by Arthur, and multiple operators run excursions. Best as a full pre-cruise day activity for those arriving two days early.
~$65–90 · Half-day · Transport from downtown included
🌊
Biscayne Bay Sunset Cruise
Bay Cruise · Sunset · Miami Skyline Views
A 1–2 hour Biscayne Bay boat tour at sunset shows Miami from the water — the downtown skyline, Brickell, Fisher Island, Government Cut (the same channel your cruise ship will navigate tomorrow), and the illuminated cruise terminals with ships moored at Terminals A and AA. Several operators depart from Bayside Marketplace (401 Biscayne Blvd). Seeing the scale of the port from the water the evening before you sail from it is a perspective-setting experience.
~$25–50 · From Bayside Marketplace · Multiple operators
Where to Eat in Miami
Pre-Cruise Dining — Cuban, Waterfront & Brickell
🍕
Versailles Restaurant
Cuban Institution · Since 1971 · VTS Essential
The unofficial embassy of Cuban Miami — operating since 1971 on SW 8th Street, this is the most historically significant restaurant in Cuban American culture. Cuban sandwich, ropa vieja, picadillo, and the best café cubano in the city. Counter service and dining room. Loud, lively, authentic. No reservations, no pretension. 3555 SW 8th St, Little Havana. Do not miss it.
£ · 3555 SW 8th St · No reservations · Little Havana
The best pre-cruise splurge dinner in Miami — world-renowned Peruvian chef Gastón Acurio’s waterfront restaurant at the Mandarin Oriental on Brickell Key, with direct Biscayne Bay views and the cruise terminals visible across the water. Ceviche, tiradito, and outstanding pisco cocktails. Book well in advance for dinner the night before sailing. 500 Brickell Key Dr.
£££ · 500 Brickell Key Dr · Book ahead
☕
Café Cubano at a Ventanita
Cuban Coffee · Standing Window · $2 per cup
The authentic Miami experience: a tiny espresso cup of intensely sweet Cuban espresso from a ventanita (standing service window). Approximately $2 per cup. Found throughout Little Havana and Calle Ocho. The ritual is the point — standing at the window, the small cup, the sugar, the conversation in Spanish and English simultaneously. Versailles and Exquisito both serve excellent ventanita café cubano.
£ ~$2 · Ventanitas throughout Little Havana
🍽
Brickell Dinner — Multiple Options
Dining District · 10 min from Port · Pre-Cruise Evening
Brickell is Miami’s most polished dining neighbourhood and the best base for a pre-cruise dinner. Top picks: Komodo (modern Asian, Brickell Ave) for buzz and energy, Area 31 at Kimpton EPIC Hotel (bay views, seafood, 16th floor), Swan (celebrity-favoured, European-influenced), or Stubborn Seed (tasting menu, Michelin-recognised). All within 10 minutes of PortMiami by taxi. Book in advance for Friday and Saturday nights.
££–£££ · Brickell Ave area · Book ahead weekends
★ VTS Pre-Cruise Miami Recommendation
Arrive two nights before sailing. Night one: check in, walk Brickell, dinner at La Mar or Komodo, watch the cruise ships lit up across the bay from your hotel window. Day two: Wynwood early, Little Havana midday, Versailles for lunch, Bayside Marketplace in the afternoon for one last look at your ship before you board it. That evening: a quiet Biscayne Bay sunset cruise, then an early night. Sailing morning: the traffic is already behind you, the stress is already spent, and Government Cut is waiting. Miami has given you something. The Caribbean is about to give you more.
Where to Stay
Hotels Near PortMiami — Downtown, Brickell & Waterfront
The best pre-cruise hotels for PortMiami are in Downtown Miami and Brickell — both within 10 minutes of the port by taxi or rideshare, both with excellent dining and walkable waterfront options, and both allowing a relaxed sailing morning without Saturday highway anxiety. South Beach hotels are beautiful but add 20–25 minutes of driving and are better for passengers arriving two or more days before sailing.
★ VTS Pick — Best Overall
5-Star · Waterfront · Biscayne Bay Views · Cruise Package
🚘 8–10 min taxi to port · Biscayne Bay views · Cruise packages available · Shuttle ~$10/person
The most consistently recommended hotel by cruise passengers departing from PortMiami — a waterfront 5-star property with Biscayne Bay views, pool overlooking the bay, and concierge-arranged transport to the port. Cruise packages include one-way transfers and continental breakfast from ~$15/person. Close to Bayside Marketplace, the free Metromover, and the cruise port causeway. Excellent restaurant (Toro Toro). The right combination of location, quality, and cruise-focused service.
★ VTS Pick — Rooftop Bay Views
Boutique Luxury · Rooftop Pools · Biscayne Bay Views
Kimpton EPIC Hotel
270 Biscayne Blvd Way, Downtown Miami
From ~$280 /night
🚘 8–10 min taxi to port · Two rooftop pools · Cruise & Relax package available
A boutique luxury standout — two rooftop pools with panoramic Biscayne Bay views, private balconies in every room, and Area 31 restaurant (16th floor, outstanding seafood, bay views). The “Cruise & Relax” package includes one-way port transfer, breakfast for two, and a welcome cocktail. Kimpton’s evening wine hour is a genuinely enjoyable pre-cruise social ritual. 8 minutes from PortMiami. The right choice for couples and discerning travellers who want boutique atmosphere over convention-scale anonymity.
Luxury · Downtown · Ship Views from Rooms
JW Marriott Marquis Miami
255 Biscayne Blvd Way, Downtown Miami
From ~$300 /night
🚘 8–10 min taxi · Ship visible from certain rooms · Rooftop pool
Polished luxury in the heart of downtown Miami with cruise ships visible from selected rooms. Rooftop pool, spa, and multiple dining options including db Bistro Moderne. Hotel shuttle to PortMiami available at ~$10/person on sailing days, bookable at check-in. 313 rooms, full business hotel amenities, and the kind of calm before-sailing atmosphere that removes embarkation anxiety entirely. Walking distance to Bayside Marketplace and the Metromover.
Luxury · Brickell Key Island · Waterfront
Mandarin Oriental Miami
500 Brickell Key Dr, Brickell Key (island)
From ~$350 /night
🚘 10–12 min taxi to port · Island setting · La Mar restaurant
On its own small island in Biscayne Bay — private, secluded, and spectacular. Pool and beach on the bay, La Mar by Gastón Acurio restaurant (VTS top dining recommendation for pre-cruise dinner), spa, and stunning panoramic views of the Miami skyline and port. The most resort-like pre-cruise stay available near PortMiami. Best for luxury cruise passengers (Cunard, Oceania, Regent, Silversea) whose ships match the register. 10–12 minutes by taxi to the port.
Mid-Range · Brickell · Reliable · Good Value
Hyatt Regency Miami
400 SE 2nd Ave, Downtown Miami
From ~$180 /night
🚘 10 min taxi to port · Close to Metromover · Free Metromover stop nearby
Solid mid-range reliability in a well-located downtown Miami position. Hyatt’s consistent quality, comfortable rooms, and proximity to the free Metromover (connects to Brickell, Museum Park, and Bayside) make this a practical pre-cruise choice. Hyatt World of Hyatt loyalty points applicable. 10 minutes from PortMiami by taxi. Good dining options on-site and within walking distance. Best value in the downtown Miami cluster for passengers who want reliability without boutique pricing.
Budget · Near MIA Airport · Park & Cruise
Hampton Inn Miami / Blue Lagoon (near MIA)
Near Miami International Airport · ~15 min to port
From ~$110 /night
🚘 Free MIA airport shuttle · Paid shuttle to PortMiami on sailing days
The best budget option for passengers flying into MIA the night before sailing. Free shuttle from MIA Airport to the hotel, then paid cruise shuttle service to PortMiami on sailing morning. Some packages combine the overnight stay with multi-day parking and port transfer. The Blue Lagoon area hotels cluster around the airport with consistent, predictable quality. Not as atmospheric as downtown or Brickell, but the price and logistics for arriving-the-night-before passengers are excellent.
2025–2026 Events & Season Calendar
Miami — Key Dates Worth Knowing for Cruise Passengers
DEC
🎨
Art Basel Miami Beach — Early December
Art Basel Miami Beach is the most significant art fair in the Western Hemisphere and transforms the city every December. 250+ international galleries, tens of thousands of collectors, artists, and visitors. Hotel rates in Miami reach their annual peak during Art Basel week. Wynwood, the Design District, and South Beach host satellite fairs, parties, and events. Embarkation traffic on Art Basel Saturday mornings can be worse than typical — allow extra time. Book hotels months in advance if sailing in early December.
Hotel Rates Peak
DEC–JAN
★
VTS Sweet Spot — January & February
January and February are PortMiami’s busiest months by passenger volume and Miami’s finest weather. Art Basel energy has faded, hotel prices ease slightly from the December peak, and the weather is consistently excellent (76–79°F, low humidity, sunny). The cruise port operates at maximum capacity with 7–10 ships some Saturdays. Pre-book everything — hotels, parking, and any restaurant reservations — but the conditions are ideal. February: Miami Open Tennis from late February adds another crowd event.
Best Conditions
MAR
🌹
Ultra Music Festival & Spring Break — March
Ultra Music Festival (late March, Bayfront Park — adjacent to the PortMiami causeway) draws 165,000+ attendees over three days. The festival footprint directly impacts downtown Miami traffic, hotel availability, and port access. If your sailing coincides with Ultra weekend, allow significant extra travel time to the terminal and expect elevated hotel rates. Spring Break at South Beach also fills the city in mid-March. Both events make March a crowd and logistics challenge despite excellent weather.
Traffic Impact
JUN–NOV
🌩
Hurricane Season — June 1 to November 30
The full Atlantic hurricane season. Peak risk: August and September. Cruise lines monitor conditions and will cancel or reroute sailings when tropical threats develop. Travel insurance with hurricane coverage is mandatory if sailing June through November from Miami. Your hotel, parking, and flights are your financial responsibility without insurance. The port operates at full capacity through hurricane season regardless of conditions. Monitor NOAA at nhc.noaa.gov in the 7 days before any summer or autumn sailing.
Critical Warning
JUL–AUG
☀️
Peak Heat & Maximum Port Capacity
July and August at PortMiami: 90–92°F heat, daily afternoon thunderstorms, peak hurricane risk, and the port operating at maximum capacity. Weekend Saturday mornings with 8–10 ships departing simultaneously combined with port and downtown construction traffic delays have produced 1–2 hour embarkation-day traffic snarls. Carnival Cruise Line has explicitly warned passengers about this. Plan: stay the night before in a hotel within 10 minutes of the port, use the tunnel, arrive at your window (not before), have water and sunscreen in your day bag.
Maximum Challenge
NOV
★
November — Best Value Month
Hurricane season ends November 30. Weather improves dramatically from October through November: 82°F, falling humidity, virtually no rain. Hotel rates drop from summer peaks. The port is still operating at full capacity (PortMiami set its first-ever one-million-passenger single-month record in November 2025) but conditions are far more comfortable. Pre-Art Basel energy begins building in the city. Excellent combination of good weather, good value, and a vibrant Miami atmosphere.
Best Value
Common Questions
PortMiami — FAQ
No. Terminal G is under construction and will not be an active embarkation terminal until late 2027. Demolition of the old Terminal G began in 2025 and the groundbreaking for the new $345 million Royal Caribbean Group terminal took place January 7, 2026. If your booking documents, a forum post, or any guide lists Terminal G for a 2026 sailing, that information is incorrect. Contact your cruise line directly to confirm your correct terminal. Royal Caribbean passengers in 2026 use Terminal A (Crown of Miami).
The PortMiami Tunnel from I-395 East is the recommended route. It delivers you directly to North Cruise Boulevard on Dodge Island, bypassing all downtown Miami surface traffic. From MIA: take FL-836 East to I-395 East, then follow PortMiami Tunnel signs. From FLL: I-95 South to I-395 East to the Tunnel. The Port Boulevard Bridge (the alternative crossing) can back up severely on peak Saturday mornings when multiple ships are departing simultaneously, combined with ongoing construction at the port and in downtown Miami. Carnival Cruise Line has explicitly warned passengers about this congestion. Tell your driver or enter the tunnel route into your GPS rather than relying on the default route.
No. Official PortMiami garages do not accept advance reservations. Parking is first-come, first-served on sailing day. Premium garages (A, AA, B) charge $35/day; standard garages (C, D, E, F, J) charge $25/day. Cash and major credit cards accepted — debit cards are not. On peak Saturdays, premium garages at busy terminals can fill. Off-site alternatives that do allow advance booking include Cruiseport Miami Parking and options aggregated via SpotHero, from around $8–15/day with shuttle service to the terminals.
Miami International (MIA) is closer at 8 miles (~20–30 min, $25–40 rideshare) and the simplest option if fares are comparable. Fort Lauderdale (FLL) is 30 miles away (~45–60 min, $45–75 rideshare) but often significantly cheaper on Southwest, Spirit, and ultra-low-cost carriers. If flying FLL, consider Brightline train to MiamiCentral then a 10-minute taxi to the port — it avoids I-95 traffic completely and costs ~$20–30 for the train. Factor in the total cost including transfer when comparing flights.
Arrive at your assigned boarding time window — not before it. Arriving significantly early does not allow you to board earlier; it only creates a wait, potentially outdoors in Miami heat. Boarding typically begins around 11:30 AM when the previous cruise clears customs. Royal Caribbean requires check-in to be completed in the Royal App at least 3 days before sailing; NCL at least 4 days. Passengers who have not completed app check-in must arrive at the pier at least 2 hours before the published sailing time. All aboard: 90 minutes before sailing.
Yes, as verified by PortMiami’s official terminal page and multiple industry sources. Terminal AA opened in 2025 and measures 490,000 square feet across four levels. It can accommodate up to three ships simultaneously and process up to 36,000 passengers per day. It uses 100% biometric paperless boarding technology — the most advanced check-in process at any cruise terminal in the world. The terminal serves MSC Cruises (including MSC World America) and Explora Journeys on selected sailings. It is LEED Gold certification in progress.
A valid US passport is strongly recommended for all passengers on all Miami itineraries. Caribbean closed-loop sailings technically allow US citizens to board with a birth certificate plus government-issued photo ID — but without a passport, a medical emergency requiring air evacuation from a foreign Caribbean port would leave you without valid international travel documents. The cost and effort of having a current passport is trivial compared to this risk. Non-US citizens require a valid passport regardless of itinerary. Check passport validity requirements for specific Caribbean territories in your itinerary.
December through April offers the best weather combination: warm (76–84°F), dry, sunny, and no hurricane risk. January and February are VTS top picks — peak season conditions with excellent weather and a buzzing Miami atmosphere. November is the best value month: hurricane season ends, weather improves dramatically, and hotel rates drop from summer peaks. Avoid July through September if possible — extreme heat, daily thunderstorms, peak hurricane risk, and the worst Saturday port traffic make these the most difficult months at PortMiami.
Quick Reference
Key Numbers, Addresses & Links — Save Before You Travel
⚓
Garage A · Royal Caribbean
2000 N Cruise Blvd, Miami, FL 33132 · $35/day
⚓
Garage AA · MSC Cruises
2200 N Cruise Blvd, Miami, FL 33132 · $35/day
⚓
Garage B · Norwegian Cruise Line
1756 N Cruise Blvd, Miami, FL 33132 · $35/day
⚓
Garage C · Disney · MSC Overflow
1648 N Cruise Blvd, Miami, FL 33132 · $25/day
⚓
Terminal V · Virgin Voyages (NOT E)
718 N Cruise Blvd, Miami, FL 33132 · $25/day
⚠️
Terminal G · NOT ACTIVE 2026
Under construction · Opens late 2027 · Call cruise line if docs say G
🚛
PortMiami Tunnel Route (Use This)
I-395 E → PortMiami Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd · Avoid Port Blvd Bridge
📞
PortMiami Port Authority
miamidade.gov/portmiami · (305) 347-4800
🚙
Official Port Parking
miamidade.gov/portmiami/parking · No reservations · $25–35/day · No debit cards
✈️
Miami International Airport (MIA)
~8 miles · ~20–30 min · $25–40 rideshare
✈️
Fort Lauderdale Airport (FLL)
~30 miles · ~45–60 min · $45–75 rideshare · Brightline option
🌩
Hurricane Season
June 1–Nov 30 · Monitor nhc.noaa.gov · Travel insurance mandatory
🏆 Pre-Cruise Checklist — PortMiami
✓ Terminal letter confirmed — NOT Terminal G (under construction until 2027) ·
✓ Garage address saved for GPS (not just “PortMiami”) ·
✓ PortMiami Tunnel route confirmed with driver (I-395 E → Tunnel → N. Cruise Blvd) ·
✓ Cruise line app check-in completed (Royal: 3 days · NCL: 4 days · Carnival: before midnight night before) ·
✓ Boarding window confirmed in app ·
✓ Boarding pass visible in app ·
✓ Luggage tags attached at hotel — not at the kerb ·
✓ Passport valid (6+ months beyond cruise return date strongly recommended) ·
✓ Travel insurance with hurricane coverage if sailing June–November ·
✓ Hotel the night before — non-negotiable at PortMiami on Saturday sailings ·
✓ Credit card for port parking (no debit cards) ·
✓ Water, sunscreen, and light layer for terminal in day bag
Affiliate Disclosure: Venture To See earns a commission on bookings made through links on this page at no additional cost to you. We only recommend services we have researched thoroughly or experienced firsthand. Royal Caribbean International, Norwegian Cruise Line, Carnival Cruise Line, Celebrity Cruises, and Silversea are VTS affiliate partners.