There’s an unspoken tension that runs beneath the glossy surface of every cruise vacation. Passengers see smiling faces, pressed uniforms, and a crew that always seems ready to say yes. What most guests never see is the ripple of concern that passes through a team when a particular request lands at the desk or comes over a walkie-talkie. Some asks are innocuous but complicated. Others cross lines that exist for very good reasons. And a few, frankly, put people at risk.
Cruise ship crew members are often very good at smiling through things they should never have to smile through – obnoxious behavior, impoliteness, arrogance, and more. That professional composure is part of the job. A passenger can bark orders, complain about nothing, or talk down to a server, and the crew member has to stay calm – they’ve got a contract, a supervisor, and a job they need to protect. Still, there are specific requests that go beyond minor irritation and into territory that genuinely unsettles the people working on board. Here are eight of them.
1. Asking to Remove Automatic Gratuities

Few requests cause as much quiet dread below decks as a passenger heading to Guest Services to remove their automatic daily tip. Passengers often feel squeezed by fees that keep rising year after year, while crew members depend on the income those fees generate. The amounts involved are not trivial. At roughly $18 to $22 per person per day, a couple on a seven-night sailing is looking at somewhere between $252 and $308 in automatic gratuities alone.
Unlike a restaurant tip handed directly to the person who served you, the cruise auto-gratuity goes into a pool managed entirely by the corporation, distributed according to formulas that passengers never see and crew members are contractually prohibited from discussing publicly. Many crew members rely on gratuities as a significant part of their income, given that base wages in the cruise industry are often modest. When someone removes the charge without explanation, the financial impact can quietly ripple through the team long after that passenger has disembarked.
2. Trying to Access Crew-Only Areas

It happens more than passengers might expect. Someone gets curious, a little too adventurous, or simply wanders through the wrong door. Guests may not enter or access any area that is restricted and/or for the use of crew members. This is not a bureaucratic rule dreamed up by lawyers. Restricted areas are restricted for a reason, and entering them can result in injury or death.
The crew lives in a hidden “ship within a ship,” and many never leave it, as very few crew members have passenger deck privileges or can use guest facilities. Most crew use what is called the “I95,” an interior corridor low down in the ship that runs its full length, to move around without entering passenger areas. When a guest pushes into those spaces uninvited, it doesn’t just create a safety hazard – it also puts the crew member present in a deeply awkward position, since cruise ship crew can get into trouble for fraternizing with guests.
3. Requesting Extra Alcohol After Visible Overindulgence

Bar staff on cruise ships face a genuine dilemma when a passenger who is clearly drunk pushes for another round. Consuming alcohol to excess impairs judgment and reduces one’s ability to recognize and avoid potentially dangerous situations. Guests who choose to consume alcohol must do so responsibly, and ship staff may refuse to serve alcoholic beverages at their discretion to any guest who does not consume alcohol responsibly. The crew member must make that call, often in front of a full bar, knowing the passenger may protest loudly.
One key concern is onboard safety in enclosed maritime environments where medical facilities, emergency protocols, and evacuation procedures must remain efficient and predictable. Limiting alcohol consumption helps reduce potential behavioral risks and supports onboard security management. Cruise security guards have the authority to break up fights and mitigate passenger hostility and drunkenness, and they also have the authority to place rowdy or dangerous passengers in the ship’s jail, known as a brig. Nobody wants to get to that point. Refusing service early is the crew’s way of preventing it.
4. Pushing Into the Stateroom Before Turnaround Is Complete

Embarkation day is one of the most chaotic on any ship, and it often brings a steady stream of passengers trying to get into cabins that simply aren’t ready. Crew members would rather guests stay out of their staterooms. Cruise ships have to turn over staterooms very quickly between each sailing, and stateroom hosts cannot do their jobs if the previous cruisers are not out of their rooms or the current passengers try to get into their rooms too early.
On embarkation day, it is common for cruise passengers to want to drop off their carry-on bags in their cabins before they are officially open. While there is nothing wrong with quickly dropping off bags if allowed, staying in your stateroom and unpacking can significantly increase your room attendant’s workload. Cruise lines want passengers to take those first few hours to explore the ship, sign up for spa treatments, or take advantage of the buffet. This early exploration helps passengers get their vacations started while giving crew members time to get everyone’s staterooms in order.
5. Asking Crew to Bend Rules Around Smuggled Alcohol

Passengers sometimes try to bring outside alcohol onboard, hide spirits in water bottles or mouthwash containers, and then quietly ask crew to look the other way. This is not a minor inconvenience for the staff involved. Guests are generally prohibited from bringing alcoholic beverages on board. Boxed wine and other containers are prohibited, and security personnel may inspect containers including water bottles, soda bottles, mouthwash, and canteens at any time, disposing of alcohol concealed in such containers.
Alcoholic beverages purchased from onboard shops or in ports of call must be presented to security upon re-boarding and will be secured by ship staff, then returned to guests just prior to the conclusion of their cruise. A crew member who turns a blind eye to smuggled liquor is risking their contract. Industry experts point out that standardized alcohol policies reduce confusion among passengers and help crew members enforce rules consistently across ships and itineraries. Asking someone to break those policies puts them in an unfair and professionally dangerous position.
6. Requesting That Crew Ignore a Fellow Passenger’s Visible Illness

Occasionally passengers notice a traveling companion or fellow guest who is clearly unwell and ask crew not to “make a fuss” about it. That instinct to protect a friend is understandable, but it collides directly with the crew’s obligations. Federal regulations mandate that before arrival, the person in charge of a vessel destined for a U.S. port of entry must report to the CDC port health station any death or ill person among passengers or crew.
SARS-CoV-2 spreads more easily between people in close quarters, and multiple studies have concluded that transmission rates among travelers on ships are much greater than in other settings. Cruise ship outbreaks can overwhelm onboard medical and public health resources. The same principle applies to norovirus and influenza, which have historically caused serious disruptions at sea. Medical facilities on cruise ships vary widely depending on ship size and itinerary. Generally, shipboard medical centers can provide care comparable to ambulatory care centers, and some are capable of providing hospital-level services. But they are not unlimited, and asking crew to ignore early warning signs is exactly how a contained situation becomes a shipwide crisis.
7. Asking a Crew Member to Form a Personal Relationship

Some passengers develop a genuine fondness for a particular crew member during their voyage and make requests that blur the professional line. They might ask the crew member to meet them outside their work area, share personal contact information, or spend social time together. Crew members are prohibited from engaging in physical relationships with guests. They are not permitted to socialize with guests beyond their professional duties, and guests are expected to respect these policies.
For the most part, cruise ship employees don’t pursue romantic involvement with passengers, for fear of losing their jobs. If they are caught, it is almost always an instant firing. They will be sent home at the next port and will have to pay for their own plane ticket and any other related expenses. A passenger who makes this kind of request may mean no harm, but they are placing the crew member in a position where staying polite and declining could feel nearly impossible, especially given the power imbalance built into the relationship.
8. Complaints About Things No One Can Change

Weather diversions, rough seas, port cancellations due to swells – these are realities of ocean travel, and crew members hear about all of them at the Guest Services desk. Complaining to Guest Services is perfectly fine when there’s a real issue. However, complaints about uncontrollable factors, like the weather, are unproductive. Crew members do many things, but one thing they can’t change is the weather, so it is better to let them focus on issues they can actually resolve.
Many crew members work far from home on long contracts with demanding schedules, and their income can depend partly on gratuities. During a shift, they may be remembering names, drink orders, cabin requests, and special routines. When a passenger insists that a crew member fix something physically impossible – a storm, a missed tender, a delayed port – and grows hostile when the answer is no, it drains energy that the team genuinely needs to manage real problems. Being rude to the crew is almost never warranted because cruise crews are among the hardest-working people in the hospitality industry. Behind that professional smile is someone who is doing the best they can, often thousands of miles from home.
The Bigger Picture

Most passengers board a cruise ship with the best intentions. They want a wonderful holiday, and for the most part the crew wants exactly the same thing for them. The Maritime Labor Convention specifies that working hours should not exceed 14 per 24-hour period or 77 per week, but there are no days off – only hours between shifts. The people serving you are operating under real constraints, physical and professional alike. Understanding what quietly worries them is not about guilt – it is about awareness.
A crew member who looks untroubled by a difficult request has simply learned to mask it well. The smile can be misleading. It doesn’t mean the crew member is happy about getting treated badly. They’re just doing their job, keeping things moving, and staying professional. The guests who tend to have the best cruises are also the ones who treat the ship as a shared space rather than a personal resort. They give crew members grace and understand that sharing a floating resort with thousands of people requires a little tolerance now and then. That simple shift in perspective makes a voyage better for everyone on board – guests and crew alike.





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