City Energy Meets the Open Ocean
Sailing from New York City is one of the greatest experiences in cruising, and there’s nothing quite like the moment your ship glides past the Statue of Liberty with the Manhattan skyline behind you. No other homeport in the world offers a departure like it. The Manhattan Cruise Terminal at Piers 88, 90, and 92 sits right in Midtown, within walking distance of Times Square, Central Park, and some of the greatest restaurants on Earth. For guests sailing Royal Caribbean or Celebrity, the Cape Liberty port in Bayonne, New Jersey is just across the water and easily reached.
Whether you’re a northeast local using the port closest to home or a visitor building a few NYC days into your cruise vacation, this is a homeport that gives you the best of both worlds: the unstoppable energy of the city, then the calm of the open Atlantic. Our advisors have sailed from New York personally and know which line uses which terminal, where to stay the night before, and how to time your arrival so embarkation day stays relaxed rather than rushed.
Unmatched Send-Off
Sailing past the Statue of Liberty and under the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge is a departure no other cruise homeport in the world can match. Be on deck for it.
Midtown Location
The Manhattan Cruise Terminal sits right in Midtown, walking distance to Times Square, Central Park, and Hell’s Kitchen’s restaurants. The city is your pre-cruise playground.
Three Airports
Served by JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark, New York gives you real flexibility on air travel. Allow 45 to 90 minutes from the airport to the terminal, as city traffic is famously unpredictable.
Things to Do in New York City
A guide to New York could be an entire adventure on its own. Here are a few of our guests’ favorite experiences for the days before or after your sailing. If you only have one day, our advice is simple: choose one neighborhood and go deep rather than racing to see everything.
New York City at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Cruise Ports | Manhattan Cruise Terminal (711 12th Ave, NY), Cape Liberty (4 Port Terminal Blvd, Bayonne, NJ), and select voyages from Brooklyn Cruise Terminal (210 Clinton Wharf, Brooklyn) |
| Nearest Airports | EWR Newark, LGA LaGuardia, JFK John F. Kennedy International – all three serve both ports |
| Driving Directions | Allow 45 to 90 minutes from the airports to either terminal, depending on traffic; terminals are easily reached by taxi or ride-share |
| Average Temperatures | New York experiences all four seasons; pack layers and check the forecast before you travel |
| Parking | Limited rooftop parking at the Manhattan Cruise Terminal; on-site parking available at Cape Liberty |
| Accessibility | Accessible handicap parking is limited and first-come at both ports; arrange mobility assistance through your cruise line or advisor |

Danny’s Insider Tips
The greatest food city on Earth: “I believe New York is the greatest food city in the world, and I mean that without reservation. The depth and diversity of what you can eat here, from the best pizza and bagels and pastrami to Michelin-starred tasting menus, is unmatched anywhere. The best way to experience it is a guided food walking tour. Whether you’re in the West Village, Chelsea Market, the Lower East Side, or Chinatown, a good food tour puts the stories and the flavors together in a way that turns a neighborhood into something you’ll never forget. It’s the perfect first morning in the city.”
9/11 Memorial & Museum: “A visit here is one of the most moving experiences New York has to offer. The reflecting pools, built in the footprints of the Twin Towers with the names of nearly 3,000 victims carved around their edges, are profoundly powerful. The museum below tells the story of that day with extraordinary care. Allow two to three hours. One World Trade Center rises directly above, and the observation deck offers 360-degree views among the finest anywhere. It stays with you.”
Danny’s pick – a helicopter ride over Manhattan: “If one experience puts the scale and beauty of New York into perspective, it’s a helicopter ride over the Big Apple. Flying along the Hudson with the skyline rising to your right, banking over Central Park, seeing the Brooklyn Bridge and the Statue of Liberty from above – it’s a perspective you can’t get any other way. Book in advance, as tours fill quickly. It’s an investment, and it’s worth every penny.”
Danny’s pick – a Broadway show: “Broadway is one of the defining cultural experiences of New York, and I recommend it to every guest. My personal favorites are Hamilton and Dear Evan Hansen. Book well in advance for the best seats, especially for Hamilton. If you’re flexible on the show, TKTS in Times Square offers same-day discounted tickets. Whatever you see, the energy of a Broadway performance is something you’ll carry home with you.”
Danny’s pick – Museum of Natural History & MoMA: “The American Museum of Natural History on the Upper West Side is one of my favorite museums anywhere. The Hall of Ocean Life, the dinosaur halls, the Rose Center – it appeals equally to children and adults. The Museum of Modern Art in Midtown is equally essential: Van Gogh’s Starry Night, Picasso, Warhol, Pollock, Matisse. Both are available through Project Expedition for guided tours that add real context.”
Browse all New York tours and experiences through our partner Project Expedition.
Where to Stay Before You Sail
We always recommend arriving at least the day before your cruise, and honestly, one day in New York is never enough. There’s so much to see before or after your voyage. Here are a few of our guests’ favorite hotels, grouped by location.

Embarkation & Disembarkation Day
New York has more than one cruise facility, so the single most important thing is knowing your terminal before you arrive. Most voyages leave from the Manhattan Cruise Terminal in Midtown; Royal Caribbean and Celebrity sailings depart from Cape Liberty in Bayonne, and select voyages use the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal. Always check your cruise documents or confirm with your Harr Travel advisor.
Arrive with your travel documents ready: passport, cruise booking confirmation or barcode, and any health documentation your cruise line requires. A valid passport is the simplest and safest choice for everyone aboard, even on closed-loop sailings. Porters wait at the curb to take your checked luggage, so you won’t haul bags to check-in. A couple of dollars per bag is customary and appreciated. After dropping your bags you’ll pass through port security, check in with the cruise line, and board.
For disembarkation, you’ll be assigned a number or color and called off in waves. Self-assist, where you carry your own bags, usually gets you off earliest and is ideal if you have an early flight out of one of the city’s airports. Confirm your pickup location and terminal with your transportation provider in advance; on-demand shuttles, taxis, and rideshare are also available at the port.
One more thing: be on deck for the sail-away. Watching the skyline shrink and passing the Statue of Liberty is the kind of moment guests talk about for years.

Your New York Cruise Questions, Answered
Browse Our Port Guides
Pick the port you’re sailing from and get the local knowledge that makes the day before, or the day after, a whole lot smoother. Each guide is built from firsthand experience, and if you’d like a hand planning the cruise itself, an advisor is always just a message away.













