Carnival Cruise Line has refreshed its “Have Fun. Be Safe” cabin letter and stepped up enforcement of its onboard rules following a series of high-profile passenger fights that went viral on social media. The updated letter began appearing in every stateroom fleet-wide on June 1, 2025, ahead of Carnival’s busy summer cruise season.
The renewed posture follows a brawl in the Galveston cruise terminal that put 24 passengers on Carnival’s permanent “Do Not Sail” list, and a chair-throwing incident on Carnival Sunrise that ended with more passengers banned. Carnival itself says the rules aren’t really new. The willingness to publicize consequences clearly is.
What’s Actually In The Letter
The “Have Fun. Be Safe” letter is a one-page reminder placed in every cabin at the start of every sailing. A Carnival spokesperson told TravelPulse the document has been part of the line’s standard communications for more than two years, but the company tweaked the wording slightly ahead of the busy summer season.
The current version reinforces several specific rules:
- A 1 a.m. curfew for guests aged 17 and under, who must be in their cabin or accompanied by an adult aged 21 or older from their travel group after that hour. Carnival says this will be “strictly enforced.”
- A ban on portable Bluetooth speakers, wireless speakers, and radios anywhere on the ship. Personal devices used in public areas must use earphones so safety announcements remain audible.
- No drinks on indoor dance floors, and no handheld cardboard “clack” fans in the nightclub or on indoor dance floors. After confusion online, brand ambassador John Heald clarified that electric handheld fans up to 12 inches are still allowed in cabins for personal use.
- Smoking and vaping are restricted to designated outdoor areas only. Smoking in cabins or on balconies is prohibited and may result in a $500 fine or removal from the ship.
- A general zero-tolerance reminder. “Any guest who violates these policies or whose conduct affects the comfort, enjoyment, safety, or well-being of other guests or crew will be fined, disembarked at their own expense, and banned from sailing on Carnival in the future,” the letter reads.
Carnival has also added a 15-drink-per-day cap to its Cheers! beverage package, though that change is technically separate from the cabin letter. If you’re trying to figure out whether the package even pays for itself with that cap in place, our breakdown of cruise drink packages walks through the math.
The Incidents That Prompted The Refresh
Three viral brawls in the past year are widely seen as the trigger for Carnival’s louder posture on conduct.
The most prominent was at Galveston on April 26, 2025, when passengers disembarking from Carnival Jubilee got into a violent fight in the terminal’s luggage area after a 7-night Western Caribbean sailing. Video shared widely on Facebook showed crowds shoving past barriers, a passenger being pushed to the ground and beaten, and security struggling to contain the chaos. Carnival placed all 24 people involved on its permanent Do Not Sail list, and a 21-year-old from Chicago was charged with injury to the elderly and reckless serious bodily injury.
Photo by Alba Calbetó on Unsplash
Just over a month later, on June 7, 2025, a fight broke out near the pizzeria on Carnival Sunrise’s lido deck around 5:30 p.m., during a 4-night roundtrip Bahamas sailing from Miami. Footage showed multiple passengers throwing chairs and punches as other guests scrambled for cover. Security intervened and the passengers involved were banned for life.
A third incident, a buffet brawl on Carnival Paradise in June 2024, saw nearly 30 passengers banned and went viral on social media at the time.
In a Facebook post addressing the Galveston fight, Heald told followers that the people involved would, like anyone in any physical altercation with other guests or crew, never be allowed to cruise with Carnival again.
A Note On The Wider Reaction
Not everyone has read the renewed enforcement the same way. Some Black cruisers, including some who said they specifically chose Carnival for its hip-hop nights and “turn up cruise” reputation, have said online that they feel targeted by the rule emphasis and by reports of less hip-hop music played in the nightclubs. Carnival has not formally addressed the music question, though a spokesperson confirmed the line now runs “expanded” themed music nights.
Spokesperson Matt Lupoli told Today.com that “various media outlets have misconstrued the matter and blown it out of proportion.” That framing matters: the rules in the letter are not a sweeping new policy package. The bigger story is the gap between what’s always been written down and what’s now actually being enforced.
What This Means If You’re Booked On Carnival
For most cruisers, the practical impact is minimal. A family that doesn’t smoke in the cabin, doesn’t bring a Bluetooth speaker to the lido, and gets the kids back to the cabin by 1 a.m. won’t notice a change.
The places this matters:
- If you’re traveling with teens, the 1 a.m. curfew is now being treated as a hard line. Many cruisers have reported lax enforcement on past sailings, and that’s clearly the part Carnival is committing to fix.
- If you smoke or vape, the $500 fine for lighting up in your cabin or on a balcony is real and getting cited consistently. Designated smoking areas on Carnival ships are clearly marked; ask Guest Services if you’re not sure where.
- If you’ve packed a portable speaker for the pool deck, leave it at home. Speakers and radios will be held and returned at the end of the cruise.
- If you’re a heavy drinker, the 15-drink cap on Cheers! is a real ceiling, not a polite suggestion.
I’d read the broader signal as a positioning shift more than a rules shift. Carnival has taken a noticeably noisier public stance on consequences than its competitors. Royal Caribbean and Norwegian also ban disruptive guests, but they don’t typically run a daily social-media commentary about it. This isn’t the only Carnival rule story this year either — Carnival’s recent push on collapsible wagons is part of the same broader tone-setting.
Photo by William Jacobs on Pexels
What To Watch Next
A few things worth keeping an eye on.
The next time a viral incident happens on a Carnival ship, watch how quickly Carnival names a number publicly. The pattern in 2025 has been to confirm Do Not Sail bans within days, often through Heald’s Facebook page. If that pace holds, the deterrent strategy is the real shift here, not the letter itself.
Watch for follow-up clarifications on the music and entertainment questions. Carnival has stayed quiet on whether DJs have been instructed to change playlists, and the only on-record statement is about “expanded” themed nights. Either an explicit denial or a documented change is likely to surface as more guests come off summer sailings and post about it.
If you’re booked on a 2026 Carnival sailing and rethinking which line is right for you because of the new tone, our Carnival vs Royal Caribbean comparison walks through where each line lands on atmosphere, families, and overall vibe.
Are you booked on a Carnival sailing this year, or has the noise around the rules made you reconsider?