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French balcony vs twin balcony on AmaWaterways explained

French balcony vs twin balcony on AmaWaterways: compare the cabin experience, price difference, and when the twin balcony upgrade is worth it.

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If you are comparing French balcony vs twin balcony on AmaWaterways, I would treat the Twin balcony as the default choice and the French balcony as a tradeoff you should choose if you are OK giving up outdoor space.

There are exceptions though.

A French balcony gives you full-height glass doors that open to a railing. You get light, fresh air, and river views, but no outdoor seating space. A twin balcony combines that French balcony with a separate step-out balcony, so you have both the indoor wall-of-glass feel and a small private outdoor sitting area.

In plain English: choose the French balcony if you mainly want the view. Choose the twin balcony if you want your cabin to function like a private viewing space during scenic sailing.

French Balcony vs Twin Balcony on AmaWaterways: Quick Comparison

QuestionFrench BalconyTwin Balcony
What do you get?Glass doors that open to a railing.French balcony plus a small step-out balcony.
Can you sit outside?No. You can stand at the rail.Yes. You get outdoor seating.
Best use caseViews, light, fresh air, better value.Private coffee, reading, photos, scenic cruising.
Main riskYou may wish you had a real balcony.You may pay for space you rarely use.
My default adviceBest for people who don’t spend too much time in the room.Most people who enjoy scenic cruising.

French Balcony

On AmaWaterways, a French balcony is not a walk-out veranda. It is a set of full-height glass doors that open inward or slide open to a railing.

You can stand there, lean at the rail, get fresh air, and enjoy the view from the bed or sitting area. What you cannot do is step outside and sit in a chair.

I like French balcony cabins for clients who want the river view without pushing the trip cost up too much. On a river cruise, you are often in port, on an excursion, in the lounge, or up on the sun deck. If your cabin is mostly for sleeping, changing, and quiet downtime, a French balcony is usually enough.

Twin Balcony

Ama’s twin balcony setup gives you two ways to enjoy the view from one stateroom:

  • A French balcony with full-height glass doors.
  • A separate step-out balcony with a small outdoor sitting area.

This is not two large balconies. It is one French balcony plus one outside balcony. The value is flexibility: one person can sit outside while the other stays inside, or you can use the step-out balcony for coffee, photos, or quiet scenic stretches without going to a public deck.

Real Price Difference Examples

In our internal booking data, the twin balcony has often priced $600-$1500 higher than the French balcony on the same sailing.

Here are sample real bookings for comparison.

Sailing.Ship / Date.French Balcony.Twin Balcony.Difference.
Melodies of the Danube.AmaReina, Apr. 8, 2026.$5,298 pp.$6,098 pp.$800 pp.
Swiss Alps & Rhine Castles.AmaVenita, Jul. 28, 2026.$5,698 pp.$6,698 pp.$1,000 pp.
Captivating Rhine.AmaNubia, Oct. 10, 2026.$6,579 pp.$7,778 pp.$1,199 pp.
Melodies of the Danube.AmaMora, Oct. 24, 2026.$6,048 pp.$6,648 pp.$600 pp.
Swiss Alps & Rhine Castles.AmaSerena, May 11, 2027.$6,278 pp.$6,878 pp.$600 pp.

For a couple, that can mean roughly $1,200 to $2,400 more for the cabin on these examples.

For the broader fare context, this guide explains what is included on AmaWaterways, including meals, drinks with lunch and dinner, Sip & Sail, excursions, Wi-Fi, and common exclusions.

When I Would Book the French Balcony

I would choose the French balcony if:

  • You want the river view but do not need private outdoor seating.
  • You expect to spend most scenic time in the lounge or on the sun deck.
  • You are choosing between a better cabin and a better overall itinerary.
  • You are traveling solo and already dealing with a single supplement.
  • You are sailing in cooler months when you may not sit outside much.

You still get the light, air, and river-facing feel that make river cruise cabins appealing. You just avoid paying for outdoor chairs you may use for ten minutes a day.

My simplest recommendation: if you are not already picturing yourself sitting outside every morning, book the French balcony and use the savings elsewhere.

When I Would Pay for the Twin Balcony

I would prioritize the twin balcony if:

  • You enjoy private balcony time on ocean cruises or hotel stays.
  • You want coffee or wine outside without going to a public deck.
  • You are on a scenic Rhine or Danube route and care about private viewing.
  • One person likes fresh air while the other prefers staying inside.
  • The live price gap is modest on your exact sailing.

The twin balcony makes the most sense when you will use it daily.

Ship and Route Caveat

Do not assume every AmaWaterways ship has both cabin types.

Many European Ama ships, especially on popular Rhine and Danube routes, offer twin balcony categories. Some France river ships only offer French balconies.

This is where clients often get tripped up. The name of the itinerary is not enough. You need the exact ship, date, deck plan, and category code.

If you are still deciding between river lines rather than just cabin categories, use this broader river cruise line comparison first. If you are comparing brands directly, these guides on Viking vs AmaWaterways and AmaWaterways vs Avalon are more relevant than over-analyzing one cabin upgrade too early.

What I Would Verify Before Deposit

Before you deposit, I would check five things:

  1. The exact ship operating your sailing.
  2. Whether that ship has French balcony, twin balcony, or differently named balcony categories.
  3. The live price gap between French and twin balcony on your date.
  4. The cabin location, especially deck, forward/aft position, and proximity to stairs or service areas.
  5. Current promotions, because a category-specific offer can change the value.

FAQ

Is an AmaWaterways twin balcony worth it?

It is worth it if you will use the outdoor seating most days. If you mainly want light, air, and views from inside the cabin, I would usually keep the French balcony and use the savings elsewhere.

What is the difference between a French balcony and a twin balcony on AmaWaterways?

A French balcony has full-height glass doors that open to a railing, but no outdoor seating. A twin balcony has that French balcony plus a separate step-out balcony with a small sitting area.

Do all AmaWaterways ships have twin balcony cabins?

No. Many European Ama ships offer twin balcony categories, especially on Rhine and Danube routes, but not every ship or itinerary uses the same cabin layout or category names.

Is a French balcony enough on an AmaWaterways river cruise?

Yes, for many clients. A French balcony is usually enough if you want river views and fresh air but plan to spend scenic sailing time in the lounge, on the sun deck, or ashore.

My Bottom Line

For most AmaWaterways clients, I would start with a twin balcony, especially on the Rhine and Danube. It gives you the more complete luxury river cruise cabin experience: light, air, views, and private outdoor space.

I would move to a French balcony only when you know you will not spend much time in the cabin or are comfortable using public areas for scenic stretches.

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