Costa Magica accommodations

 






 Info 
 Dining 

Staterooms

Carnival ships have always touted generous-sized cabins, but with the Destiny-class builds forward (CostaMagica is on a Destiny-class platform) the accommodations got comfortable and classy as well as spacious.

Of the 1,358 passenger cabins on CostaMagica, 843 are outsides, and 62 percent of those have verandahs, plus there are no fewer than 64 suites, from junior to penthouse.

The standard rooms, both insides and outsides, have ample closet space, deep vanity/desk combos, mini-fridges and leather seating areas. Baths are spacious, with a vanity and shower (suites have tubs and some higher-level suites have whirlpool tubs). Outside cabins have a large single-pane window without that annoying bar down the middle to ruin the panorama.

Bath amenities are simply non-existent on the magicean cruises. There is a very small bar of soap at the sink and a gel-soap pump in the shower. That's it. No shampoo, no lotion and no face cloths either.

What the cabins do have, however, which is another anomaly for magice-based cruises, is ice. A tall, sleek ice bucket is filled in the morning and again at night for turndown. Since magiceans generally don't use ice in either soft drinks or water, it's surprising, and for me, it was greatly welcomed. And speaking of turndown, it is not elaborate in any way: The covers are turned back, your ice bucket is filled, soiled towels are replaced and your curtains are closed. It's a lovely way to return to your cabin; don't expect chocolates or towel animals.

All cabins and suites have large televisions with programming in many languages, but while Italian gets four or five stations and French, German and Spanish three each, there is unfortunately only one in English. BBC World, which is similar to CNN Headline, got boring after the third day and there was no English alternative. It looked like there were pay-per-view movies but I could not figure out how much they cost (and they were not new ones, anyway). I did watch an incredible documentary about whales in German (the only words I understood were Beluga, Inuit and Greenland), but the visuals were so fantastic that the language didn't matter. I watched dubbed-in-Spanish and dubbed-in-French versions of ER and NYPD Blue respectively (Andy Sipowicz's voice had a high, whiny quality in French, which had me laughing), and I actually answered three questions correctly while watching an Italian-language quiz show.

Lighting and storage options are terrific in all of the standard cabins, with little bedside lamps, vanity lighting and a low-light Murano glass art piece affixed to the large mirror across from the bed.

Verandah cabins are identical to the standard outsides, with the addition of a nice-sized balcony framed by a Plexiglas barrier. Furnishings are contemporary Italian-designed cloth mesh, low and sleek. Unfortunately the low chairs cause the balcony rail to fall exactly at eye level for anyone of normal height. And instead of using sliding doors as on most ships with verandas, for some reason these ships are all built with doors that open outward. Perhaps the idea was to keep people from leaving them open, but that doesn't work, and the end result is constant noisy slamming of balcony doors as people go in and out of their cabins at all hours of the day and night. Twenty seven accommodations are configured for physically challenged guests (another anomaly in a magicean-centric ship) and the room numbers are even in Braille on all cabin doors.

A note about cabin selection: This ship is jammin' 24 hours a day while in magice, so try to secure a cabin that is under other cabin space and not under public rooms or the Lido Deck area if possible. Cabin soundproofing is not very good and you are likely to be awakened by pounding footsteps or scraping chairs at all hours. And, if you are contemplating the circular itinerary of Rome to Rome in an outside, try (as hard as you can) to get a starboard accommodation; the ship hugs the land, and the sights are often magnificent and are not visible from the port side.


Grand suite stateroom
Grand Suite with Private Veranda
Grand Suites with Private Verandas GS include two lower beds that convert into a queen-sized bed, a sitting area, private veranda, private bathroom with shower and whirlpool tub, direct-dial telephone service, minibar, TV, safe, and a hairdryer.



Balcony stateroom
Private Veranda Stateroom
Private Veranda Staterooms 10 include two lower beds that convert into a queen-sized bed, a private veranda, private bathroom with shower, direct-dial telephone service, minibar, TV, safe, and a hairdryer. Approximately 210-sq.-ft. stateroom.


Oceanview Suite
Oceanview Stateroom
Oceanview Staterooms 7 include two lower beds that convert into a queen-sized bed, a private bathroom with shower, direct-dial telephone service, minibar, TV, safe, and a hairdryer.



InteriorStateroom
Interior Stateroom
Interior Staterooms 5 include two lower beds that convert into a queen-sized bed, a private bathroom with shower, direct-dial telephone service, minibar, TV, safe, and a hairdryer. Approximately 160-sq.-ft. stateroom.



News
Cruise ships
Carnival ships
Celebrity ships
Costa ships
Crystal ships
Cunard ships
Disney ships
Holland America ships
Mediterranean shipping ships
Norwegian coastal voyage ships
Norwegian ships
Oceania ships
Orient ships
Princess ships
Radisson ships
Royal Caribbean ships
Seabourn ships
Silversea ships
Swan Hellenic ships
Windstar ships
Imperial Majesty ships
Star Clipper ships
Discovery world ships
Festival ships
Island ships
P & O ships
Peter Deilmann ships
Phoenix Reisen ships
Saga ships
Seetours ships
Sun ships
American west ships
Canodros ships
Clipper ships
CruiseWest ships
Delta queen ships
Hebridean ships
Sea dream ships
Uniworld ships
Viking ships
Windjammer ships
American Safari ships
American ships
Glacier Bay ships
Sea Cloud ships
Cruise styles
Cruise travel tips
Special cruise offers
Cruise agent

Partners:
monoSeo.com
monoHelp.com
monoCruise.com