Tracy Arm Is One of Alaska’s Most Accessible Days
For passengers with mobility limitations, tender phobia, or concerns about navigating unfamiliar ports on foot, Tracy Arm Fjord is genuinely good news. Because the ship never docks — you cruise the fjord entirely from the ship — the accessibility picture is simple: if you can access your ship’s open decks, you can experience Tracy Arm fully.
No gangway. No tender. No uneven sidewalks. No hills or cobblestones.
Deck Access on Modern Ships
Most large cruise ships — Princess, Holland America, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian, Celebrity — have accessible open-air decks on multiple levels. Typical options include:
Promenade Deck (usually Deck 7). A full wraparound walking deck on many ships, accessible by elevator. Railing height is standard and sightlines are good, though upper-deck views are slightly better.
Lido/Pool Deck (typically Deck 14–15). The highest open deck on most ships. Some areas have raised thresholds at door entries — check with your ship’s accessibility desk beforehand. This is the best deck for forward glacier views.
Observation Lounge. Many ships have a forward-facing interior observation lounge with floor-to-ceiling windows. This is the best option for passengers who can’t tolerate cold weather for extended periods. Heated, comfortable chairs, and the same glacier view without the wind.
Cold Weather and Mobility
Tracy Arm is cold. In July, temperatures on the open deck can feel like 40–45°F with wind chill, even when Juneau was 60°F earlier that morning. For passengers with arthritis, circulation issues, or cold sensitivity, plan for this.
Layers are essential even for people who are typically warm. Bring gloves, a hat, and a windproof outer layer. If extended cold exposure is a concern, the interior observation lounge strategy works well.
Small Ship Expeditions (Zodiac Access)
Some small expedition cruise lines — UnCruise, Lindblad — offer zodiac excursions into Tracy Arm that allow a closer approach to the glacier. These are not accessible for passengers with significant mobility limitations due to the zodiac boarding process (climbing in and out of an inflatable boat at water level). Check with the specific operator if this is relevant to your situation.
Recommended Approach for Mobility-Limited Passengers
- Reserve a cabin on a higher deck for easier elevator access to open areas
- Confirm accessible deck layouts with your cruise line before sailing
- Identify your ship’s observation lounge location before Tracy Arm day
- Bring warm layers in an accessible bag — a wheeled carry-on works well on deck
- Position near a warm interior exit so you can duck inside quickly if needed