Newbie Question - Cabbatoge
#16




Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: London, Ontario
Posts: 5,212
Often1 wasn't disputing that fact. He was just simply, and correctly, saying that the cruiseline can't sell you that itinerary, but they won't physically restrain you from disembarking a cruise in another US port, you will just have to reimburse the cruise line for the fine they get from the US government. Why someone would actually book a cruise like that with this intention in the first place, I don't know.
#19




Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania
Programs: Milege+, SkyMiles, AAdvantage, HHonors Diamond, Marriott Gold
Posts: 1,748
#20
Join Date: May 2004
Programs: BA blue, LH Senator, KQ (FB) gold
Posts: 8,214
Traditionally, cabotage is navigation and shipping along a coastline, oftentimes used in reference to a single country. Many countries have regulations which restrict cabotage to domestic providers so as to maintain their domestic shipping industry. The US has such regulations which require that US flagged ships must be owned by US citizens and crewed by US citizens or permanent residents. In addition, the US also has regulations that US flagged ships must have (at a minimum) their bottoms built in the US. For that reason, there are very few commercial cruise vessels of any size that are US flagged, given that the US shipbuilding industry is all but dead with the exception of naval vessels.
More recently, the term has been extended to airlines and the transportation of passengers between two airports in the same country, with the added wrinkle that it is often also applied even in the case of transiting an airport outside the country (so-called 6th freedom rights). So, Air Canada cannot transport passengers from New York via Toronto to Los Angeles, something which would be permitted on ships.

