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Stateroom Guide  ·  2024

Disney Treasure
Complete Cabin Guide

Every category explained  ·  1,246 staterooms  ·  Last updated March 2026

The Disney Treasure launched in 2024 as the Triton-class sister to the Wish, built around a theme of adventure and exploration — from the Aladdin-inspired atrium to Encanto dining and the EPCOT-inspired Tomorrow Tower Suite. With 1,246 staterooms across 15 decks, it shares the same cabin layout as the Wish and Destiny, making this guide directly comparable to those ships.

Interactive Tool Use our Disney Treasure deck plan to browse every cabin, filter by category, compare two rooms side by side, and search directly by room number.

Stateroom Categories at a Glance

The Treasure uses DCL's standard category numbering system. Here are all tiers at a glance:

Tier Categories Sq Ft View Sleeps
Concierge1A 1B 1C 2A 2B 3A 3B296–1,966+Varies5–8
Family Verandah4A 4B 4C 4E284Private verandahup to 5
Deluxe Verandah5A 5B 5C 6A 6B 7A243Private verandahup to 4
Family Oceanview8B 8C237Windowup to 5
Deluxe Oceanview9A 9B 9C 9D218–237Porthole / windowup to 4
Inside11A 11B 11C169No windowup to 4

Concierge Staterooms (1A–3B)

1A Tomorrow Tower Suite — The Crown Jewel

There is only one category 1A on the entire ship. The Tomorrow Tower Suite is an EPCOT-inspired two-story suite in the funnel at 1,966 sq ft, sleeping up to 8 guests across 4.5 bathrooms with a private elevator and floor-to-ceiling windows instead of a traditional balcony. It sells out at every booking window — set an alert for your sail date.

1B Royal Suites — Rajah & Bagheera

Two category 1B Royal Suites sit on Deck 13 (rooms 13000 & 13500), Aladdin-themed and Jungle Book-themed respectively, each at 1,759 sq ft with spiral staircases, private Jacuzzi verandah, and stained-glass windows. Both sleep 6 and come with full Concierge perks.

1C Royal Suites — Aft Corner

Two aft-corner suites on Deck 10 at 1,507 sq ft with private whirlpool verandahs, walk-in rain showers, and double sinks. Slightly more attainable than the 1B rooms but still among the most coveted on the ship.

2A 1-Bedroom Suite with Extended Bow Verandah — Hidden Gem

Only 2 of these exist (rooms 12000 & 12500) and they feature an oversized extended bow verandah at 1,031 sq ft, wet bar, walk-in closet, and 100 MB included Wi-Fi. If the Tower Suite is out of reach, this is your next best luxury option.

2B 1-Bedroom Suite with Verandah

18 suites spread across Decks 12–13 with wet bar, walk-in closet, and 100 MB Wi-Fi at 608 sq ft. These are the most bookable Concierge suites and a favourite for repeat DCL cruisers who want full lounge access.

3A & 3B Entry-Level Concierge

The most accessible way onto the Concierge deck. The 3A (296 sq ft) has a private verandah in Lion King-themed hallways; the 3B (357 sq ft) has no verandah but floor-to-ceiling ocean views from the forward section of Deck 11 through Finding Nemo hallways. Both include priority boarding, private lounge and sun deck access, and dedicated concierge service.

Family Verandah Staterooms (4A–4E)

All 284 sq ft with a split bathroom and Murphy bed for families of 4–5. The same inside tip applies here: always choose 4B over 4A when available — bump-out balcony at the same fare.

4A Standard Family Verandah

Midship Decks 10–11, Finding Nemo & Luca themed. The baseline family verandah room. Solid choice, but check for 4B availability first.

4B Family Verandah with Bump-Out — The Insider Pick

Same price as 4A, but with a larger bump-out balcony footprint. Always filter for 4B over 4A when searching at the same fare.

4C Family Verandah (Enclosed Navigator's Style)

Uses DCL's enclosed Navigator's-style verandah with a porthole opening — more wind protection than an open balcony. Ideal for Alaska itineraries or anyone who finds open verandahs too breezy.

4E Family Verandah with Extended Aft Balcony — Community Favourite

Available on Decks 6, 9, and 10. The oversized aft verandah delivers unobstructed wake views. Stunning at sunrise and sail-away. These are the first family rooms to sell out at every booking window — book immediately and decide later.

Deluxe Verandah Staterooms (5A–7A)

Standard verandah staterooms for 3–4 guests at 243 sq ft with a split bath. Choose 5B over 5A whenever available — bump-out balcony at the same price.

5A & 5B Standard Deluxe Verandah

Midship Decks 6–10. The 5B bump-out gives noticeably more balcony space at the same price — always pick this when the fare is equal.

5C Aft Deluxe Verandah

Aft-facing verandah with partial wake views. A solid mid-range option if 4E is sold out and you still want that aft perspective.

6A & 6B Verandah with Minor Obstruction

A solid lower railing partially blocks the sightline from the verandah. Priced slightly below 5A/5B, making them a reasonable budget trade-off for a verandah room.

7A Navigator's Verandah — Best Value Pick

DCL's signature semi-enclosed verandah with porthole-style opening. Total privacy, excellent wind shelter, and almost always priced below a standard open verandah. Highly recommended for couples who want outdoor space without full verandah pricing.

Oceanview Staterooms (8B–9D)

8B & 8C Family Oceanview

No verandah, but a large porthole-style window and space for up to 5 guests at 237 sq ft with a split bath. The best budget option for families who need natural light.

9A & 9C Corner Oceanview — Hidden Gems

These forward corner rooms on Decks 7–8 benefit from the slanted hull — significantly more floor space than a standard room, wide-angle ocean views, and oceanview pricing. Find them on the deck plan.

9B Deck 2 Oceanview

Deck 2 only. Steps from the Oceaneer Club and Walt Disney Theater — convenient for families with young children.

9D Slanted Porthole Oceanview

Forward Decks 6–7. The angled porthole limits the sightline somewhat. Budget oceanview option; note that most rooms in this category don't include an upper berth.

Inside Staterooms (11A–11C)

No window — but absolutely fine for guests who plan to spend their time at the pool, on shore excursions, or at dinner. At 169 sq ft with a split bathroom on 11A and 11B, they're comfortable and the best value on the ship. Location matters here more than any other tier.

11A Inside — Decks 9–10

Midship stability, the most desirable inside location, and access to the best themed hallways on the ship.

11B Inside — Midship

Good midship position. Popular budget pick for first-time DCL cruisers. Best all-around inside cabin.

11C Inside — Deck 2 Only

The cheapest rooms on the ship. Steps from the Oceaneer Club and Walt Disney Theater — great for families with young children, but be aware of potential noise from the theater above. Single bathroom (no split) in this category.

Expert Picks by Traveller Type

Best for families on a budget
11B Midship or 8B
11B for stability; 8B if you want a window and need space for 5.
Best value verandah
7A Navigator's Verandah
Privacy, wind shelter, and priced below open balcony rooms.
Best family splurge
4E Extended Aft Verandah
Oversized wake-view balcony. First to sell out — book fast.
Most underrated room
9A / 9C Corner Oceanview
Extra floor space from the hull angle — nobody talks about these.
Best concierge entry point
3A
Full perks — lounge, sun deck, priority boarding — at the entry price.
Once-in-a-lifetime
1A Tomorrow Tower Suite
EPCOT-inspired, private elevator, one room on the entire ship. Enough said.

Ready to Find Your Cabin?

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Mouse Cruise Cabins is an unofficial fan resource and is not affiliated with Disney Cruise Line. Room data compiled from public sources — always verify details with DCL before booking.