Costa Cruises
Price per person per night (double occupancy) · live data updated twice daily · as of May 25, 2026
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Forward 12-month schedule for Costa Toscana with per-cabin live pricing. Click any cell to view that sailing on CruiseDirect. If this ship has a ship-within-a-ship enclave (Haven, Sky Class, The Retreat, etc.), toggle “Show ship-within-a-ship” to split the Suite column into per-tier pricing.
Costa Toscana offers a vibrant cruise experience with diverse activities, dining options, and entertainment for all ages.
Vibe: vibrant, family-friendly, and entertaining.
Best for: Family Planner, Party Cruiser, and Entertainment Seeker.
Costa Toscana is not designed as a family-first ship, and families usually notice the more adult-leaning tone. Onboard options can still support family travel, but youth programming is not the ship’s defining strength. It tends to fit families with older kids or adult-family groups more than young-kid-focused trips. The overall signal for families is a non-family-first experience best for older-kid or adult-family travel.
Costa Toscana can suit active retirees who enjoy a livelier cruise style, but the ship’s crowd flow can feel busier than classic retiree favorites. Retirees often perceive the experience as fun and capable, with comfort available but not always the default mood in peak areas. It fits best when travelers want a mix of relaxation and activity. The overall signal for retirees is retiree-compatible cruising with a higher-energy onboard tempo.
Costa Toscana is not a luxury-forward ship, and luxury-minded guests typically perceive the overall atmosphere as mainstream. Even with upgrades, the ship’s identity is oriented toward broad appeal rather than quiet exclusivity or service intensity. It can still be enjoyable, but it does not read as luxury in the way luxury travelers expect. The overall signal for luxury travelers is a mainstream experience with limited luxury character.
Costa Toscana is a strong match for fun-first travelers who want a lively social atmosphere that carries from daytime into nightlife. Party-oriented guests often perceive the ship as casual, energetic, and easy to join in, with a crowd culture that fuels the vibe. The experience tends to feel social by default rather than something you have to seek out. The overall signal for party cruisers is high social energy with day-and-night fun density.
Costa Toscana strongly appeals to entertainment-focused travelers through performance variety, show programming, and a venue lineup that supports repeat nights. Entertainment-minded guests often perceive the shows and live music as a centerpiece rather than an add-on. The cruise feels performance-rich across evenings and venues. The overall signal for entertainment seekers is high production variety with strong venue depth.
Onboard programming emphasizes enrichment and context, creating an experience guided by observation rather than constant stimulation. Public spaces support a steady rhythm, and the ship’s tone reads adult-leaning and purpose-driven across most days. Design, space, and itinerary framing work together to keep the experience focused on learning and place, not headline production. The overall signal for Explorer is moderate alignment.
Onboard atmosphere leans toward restoration, with quieter public spaces and a comfort-first rhythm shaping most days and evenings. Wellness signals show through spa-forward cues, consistent service, and dining that supports a calmer cadence rather than late-night momentum. Space and design reinforce a settled, low-friction feel, keeping the ship’s energy more soothing than high-output. The overall signal for Wellness Seeker is moderate alignment.
Dining onboard reflects quality-driven dining without a food-first identity, where solid ingredient quality and venue design matter more than sheer variety. Scale and layout influence how evenly food expresses itself, with pockets of strength alongside variability emerging across sailings. Culinary character leans toward measured creativity within a broad onboard mix, reinforcing the ship’s overall tone rather than redefining it. The overall signal for Taste Seeker is limited alignment.
Pricing onboard is shaped by a value-forward posture, with large cabin inventory and frequent promotional cycles influencing how often opportunities appear. Ship class and demand curves create predictable deal windows rather than constant softness. Perceived value tends to emerge through more experience than expected at the fare paid. The overall signal for Deal Chaser is strong alignment.
Life onboard is shaped by a mixed demographic structure, where ship scale and public-space design influence how comfortably solo guests participate. The balance between adult-focused pacing and family presence creates situational social comfort rather than consistent integration. Programming and staff interaction allow flexibility but do not actively center solo travel. The overall signal for Solo Traveler is moderate alignment.
Life onboard is shaped by a familiar but slightly premium structure, where moderate guidance supports navigation without eliminating all learning curves. Ship size and pacing generally provide comfortable motion profiles, though confidence builds more gradually. Orientation improves over the first days as routines become familiar. The overall signal for First-Time Cruiser is moderate alignment.
Life onboard is shaped by a modern but layered physical layout, where accessibility features are present alongside longer walking distances or vertical transitions. Movement between venues remains achievable, though planning and pacing influence the experience. Layout design balances openness with complexity across public spaces. The overall signal for Accessibility-Focused Traveler is moderate alignment.
Median Balcony price per person per night — 7-day rolling average
Costa Toscana is priced at the 36th percentile among comparable ships — a strong value relative to peers.