Loading Page...

How much was a luxury ticket on the Titanic?

Most of the time, it was $5 per British pound, so third-class tickets would cost $35 in 1912, with first-class accommodations coming in at $4,000. Even when you account for inflation, the cost is staggering. It would cost $133,132 to travel in a first-class suite on the Titanic.



People Also Ask

First-Class Tickets The average cost of a first-class ticket to board the Titanic was about $400 ($5,000 in today's money). There were two first-class rooms on the Titanic that cost $3,300 each (more than a brand new car back then). The rooms were each 50 feet long with there own personal deck.

MORE DETAILS

A third class ticket on the Titanic cost around £7 in 1912, which is equivalent to about £852 or $1,071 in today's money. That price included food and accommodation on board the ship. Titanic's third class was considered to be as good as second class on other ships of that time.

MORE DETAILS

Cabins B-51/53/55 were the most expensive and one of the most luxurious Parlor Suites of the Titanic, located on the starboard side of B Deck. They were occupied by Charlotte Cardeza and her son Thomas Cardeza. The sitting room B-51 had green chairs, several sofas and armchairs, and a fireplace.

MORE DETAILS

J. Pierpont Morgan and Milton Hershey were among those who missed the disaster.

MORE DETAILS

Titanic 1st Class Victims An estimated 123 of the roughly 324 passengers journeying in first class perished in the accident, 39% of those traveling on a 1st class ticket.

MORE DETAILS

The Titanic's first-class cabins “were very luxurious for their time, but by today's standards, were very small,” said Charles A. Haas, president of the Titanic International Society and a co-author of “Titanic: Triumph and Tragedy.” “They were not much larger than today's tourist-grade motel rooms.”

MORE DETAILS