IMNiles Posted August 29, 2006 #1 Share Posted August 29, 2006 Hello - I know that in the past when you brought your own wine you paid a corkage fee in the dining room. For my upcoming trip, my travel agent has ordered some wine *from RCCL* to have delivered to my room. If I bring a bottle to dinner, will I be charged a corkage fee since I did not order it there? Note that this is NOT a question regarding bringing outside wine on the ship, smuggling, or anything of the sort. This wine was purchased from RCCL for delivery to my cabin. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andy1962 Posted August 29, 2006 #2 Share Posted August 29, 2006 I have heard ....yes:confused: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
happy cruzer Posted August 29, 2006 #3 Share Posted August 29, 2006 If the wine is purchased from RCI, all fees are paid and you can bring it to the dining room without a corkage fee. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zephyr17 Posted August 29, 2006 #4 Share Posted August 29, 2006 My TA did the same (thanks, Michelle) on the Radiance. Brought it to the dining room, and they opened it with no fee. I brought the cabin placement note that was with it, just in case, but they didn't care. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hypo Posted August 29, 2006 #5 Share Posted August 29, 2006 On our Rhapsody cruise last April, our TA had a special deal where we received 6 bottles of wine. (When we got to our stateroom on boarding, there were all 6 bottles of wine, each in their own ice bucket, lined up on the counter:D ). The first night when we took a bottle to the dining room, they tried to charge us corkage fee, I protested, since it was their wine. The Head Waiter got involved, did some checking, and they decided that I was correct==no corkage fee. We were able to bring other bottles to the dining room and exchange them for better wines, just paying the difference in price. The wine was the "LaTerre" brand and the white chardonnay was drinkable, but certainly not a fine wine. Hypo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rjg41 Posted August 29, 2006 #6 Share Posted August 29, 2006 As suggested earlier, bring the cabin receipt with you to the dining room and all will be fine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Schplinky Posted August 29, 2006 #7 Share Posted August 29, 2006 We received 7 bottles from our tA and there was no corkage fee. Also, they sent white zinfandel, which tatses like cottoncandy to us, so they let us switch to a caberbet or chardonney in the same label, although that took some persistence. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
katiel53 Posted August 29, 2006 #8 Share Posted August 29, 2006 I think it depends on where the TA purchased the wine. Once on another line, the TA sent us wine that he got from outside place, not the cruiseline. To have that opened at dinner would have been a corkage fee. We decided not to open it as it wasn't good wine to start with. On RCCL, our TA always orders the wine from RCCL so there isn't any corkage fee. I have seen where it was suggested to order from an outside company and the wine/beer would be delivered to your cabin. I would think there would be a corkage fee for the wine if brought to the dining room. I am not sure if you will be charged the fee. The safest thing to do is order the wine from RCCL. JMO. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tinkles0928 Posted August 29, 2006 #9 Share Posted August 29, 2006 Sorry if this is a stupid question, but how do you go about having a bottle of wine opened in your cabin and not at dinner? :cool: :o :rolleyes: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Schplinky Posted August 29, 2006 #10 Share Posted August 29, 2006 Room sevrice will bring you glasses and ther eshould be a corkscrew in your cabin. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
isujim Posted August 29, 2006 #11 Share Posted August 29, 2006 When our ta has bought wine from RC......it is usually waiting on us in the cabin with a cork screw for us to open it. If you buy a bottle of wine and have it delivered to your stateroom, whoever delivers it can open it or your cabin steward can open it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dreamboat43 Posted August 29, 2006 #12 Share Posted August 29, 2006 We received a "welcome aboard" complimentary bottle of sparkling wine in our cabin (royal family suite) on Freedom. We took the bottle to the dinner with us. We mentioned to the waiter that it was a complimentary bottle. It was served without a corkage fee. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IMNiles Posted August 30, 2006 Author #13 Share Posted August 30, 2006 Thanks, all! I am certain that my TA purchased this wine from RCCL, so I will assume there will be no corkage, and start waving around the note that comes with it if they try. :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KarinaGW Posted August 30, 2006 #14 Share Posted August 30, 2006 In case anybody is confused as to what a corkage fee is: Basically...the ship/hotel/whatever sells its own wine/liquor. If you bring your own, they make nothing off of it so a corkage charge is there way of getting even. Back in the day I would regualarly have hotel parties and would have to arrange to pay a corkage fee for the stuff I brought in to use in my own room. At least, RCCL doesn't (or rather didn't now that we have the wine ban in place) charge you for in-room consumption....not I guess from a lack of desire to, but no really practical way of implementing it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rjg41 Posted August 30, 2006 #15 Share Posted August 30, 2006 I think it depends on where the TA purchased the wine. Once on another line, the TA sent us wine that he got from outside place, not the cruiseline. To have that opened at dinner would have been a corkage fee. We decided not to open it as it wasn't good wine to start with. On RCCL, our TA always orders the wine from RCCL so there isn't any corkage fee. I have seen where it was suggested to order from an outside company and the wine/beer would be delivered to your cabin. I would think there would be a corkage fee for the wine if brought to the dining room. I am not sure if you will be charged the fee. The safest thing to do is order the wine from RCCL. JMO. Don't know the circumstances of what you claim but it would not be allowed by any cruise line today. Any wine in your room comes from the cruise line either oaid by someone as a gift or from the cruise line. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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