We were booked in a Crown Loft Suite on the Allure for the October 30 transatlantic sailing.
The Wonder has the same number of suites as the Allure - but this is because they increased the Junior Suites from 86 to 114.
The Allure had 2 Star Loft, 2 Panoramic, 17 Crown Loft, 6 Grand 2 bedroom and 2 Grand suites that aren't present on the Wonder.
If Royal Caribbean had assigned Wonder cabins based on the original suite category, all of the full suites that were above would have been placed into full suites on the Wonder, with some reservations moved down 1 level, but no lower than Grand.
But that's not what they did. Evidently to minimize disruption, they moved suites from the Allure to the same class on the Wonder until they ran out - and then moved most of the displaced reservations for Crown Loft and other categories down to Junior Suite.
While they are offering the same Sky/Star amenities as the original cabin plus $300 ($10.71 per day per person for a 14 night cruise), they have an unreasonable offer on the cabin fare - you pay the lower of the original fare for your original cabin OR the current fare for the Junior Suite (which is probably over $11,000 for a 14 night cruise, for 2 people).
So the offer they're making is to pay what you would have paid for a larger cabin - end up with a much smaller Junior Suite (1/2 to 1/3 the size), and what you get are the same amenities plus a $300 credit.
And what makes this really unfair - those Allure reservations made for Grand or Junior suites are at the original price - so the affected customers will pay more than other customers that originally booked GS or JS.
In our case, we could end up paying $5100 more than other JS customers - which is far more than the value of Sky class plus a $300 onboard credit.
What would make sense is for Royal to offer the JS fare as of the time of the original reservation - so you wouldn't be penalized for booking a larger cabin originally and then getting downgraded.
But so far, Royal doesn't appear to be willing to admit their mistake in how they handled this transition for full suite passengers - and appears more interested in getting us to request a refund - and then rebook the Junior Suites at the current (much higher price).
Our travel agent has been unable to make any progress in getting an offer that makes sense.
I've called Royal Caribbean and talked with their Resolutions group - and they're unable to help, because a different group made the decision on how the cabins would be allocated and the offers made to the downgraded full suite customers.
Unlike cancellations for COVID, this mess is caused entirely by poor Royal Caribbean business decisions - they decided to switch ships, they decided how the cabins would be allocated, and they decided the offers for the displaced passengers.
If you're in this situation, we have until October 20 to get a better offer for the Wonder sailing before we have to request a full refund.
Have your travel agent call Royal Caribbean, complain about the situation - and ask for a better offer.
And if that doesn't work, then contact Royal Caribbean yourself.
If enough of the affected customers (which could be over 600 across the transatlantic and European sailings) raise this issue, perhaps Royal Caribbean will review what they've done and realize what they've offered makes no sense - and then come up with a better solution.