Last updated June 25, 2026
When you add a cruise to a trip, JourneyFuse automatically builds a ship profile into the itinerary — so your client sees the ship itself, not just a list of ports. No data entry required: the moment your cruise booking has a cruise line and a ship name, the profile populates from our ship library.
What your client sees: a polished ship card with tabs for the ship overview, the day-by-day sailing, stateroom categories, dining, onboard activities, and a few line-specific tips.
The ship card appears in the At a glance / Highlights area of the itinerary and on the public proposal page. It includes:
The profile is driven by the cruise booking, so the key is to add the cruise as a booking — not just type ports into the itinerary by hand.
Once the booking is in place, open the Itinerary tab and you'll see the ship card. It shows on the client's public itinerary and proposal too.
To feature the exact cabin your client booked, open the cruise booking and select the stateroom category. That category then appears as Your cabin at the top of the Staterooms tab, with the rest of the ship's categories listed below it.
The cabin number, category, and deck come straight from the booking, so once they're on the cruise booking the Your cabin card on the ship overview fills in automatically. Nothing to set on the itinerary itself.
When a family or party books several cabins on the same sailing, you can show everyone's cabin on each person's itinerary so they know who is where.
This is a manual list, so it works whether the cabins are booked under one trip or as separate trips for each cabin. It is the right fit for a family booking multiple cabins, which is different from a group booking (a group you build and sell as one). See Group Bookings if you are selling a true group.
The ship card isn't showing. The profile only appears when the cruise is added as a booking with a ship name. If you built the itinerary by adding day blocks manually, add the cruise under Bookings (steps above) and it will populate. If you added the booking but the card still isn't there, open the cruise booking and re-save, or use Sync Bookings on the itinerary to refresh.
A tab is missing (no Staterooms, or no Dining). We have deep content for the major ocean lines, and we're continually expanding coverage. If a specific ship is thin on detail, the tabs with data still show, and you can reach out to support to have a ship's content prioritized.
The details look slightly off for my ship. Ship specs (square footage, capacity) are accurate representative figures — cruise lines often publish ranges that vary by deck. If something looks materially wrong for a ship you sell often, let support know and we'll correct the catalog.
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