Sailings
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InsideOceanviewBalconySuite
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$3,702 USD $176.29 USD per day$4,522 USD $215.33 USD per day$5,417 USD $257.95 USD per day$6,837 USD $325.57 USD per day
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Date Date Location Location Arrival Arrival Departure Departure
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Sat, Oct 10, 2026 BARCELONA, SPAIN (CHECK IN STARTS AT 0100P) -- 5:00 pmSun, Oct 11, 2026 IBIZA, SPAIN 12:30 pm 10:00 pmMon, Oct 12, 2026 AT SEA -- --Tue, Oct 13, 2026 MARSEILLE (PROVENCE), FRANCE 7:00 am 5:00 pmWed, Oct 14, 2026 CORSICA (AJACCIO), FRANCE 8:00 am 6:00 pmThu, Oct 15, 2026 GENOA (FOR CINQUE TERRE), ITALY 8:00 am 8:00 pmFri, Oct 16, 2026 LA SPEZIA (FOR FLORENCE/PISA),ITALY 7:00 am 7:00 pmSat, Oct 17, 2026 CIVITAVECCHIA (FOR ROME), ITALY 6:00 am 6:00 pmSun, Oct 18, 2026 NAPLES, ITALY (FOR CAPRI & POMPEII) 7:00 am 7:00 pmMon, Oct 19, 2026 AT SEA -- --Tue, Oct 20, 2026 CRETE (CHANIA), GREECE 8:00 am 6:00 pmWed, Oct 21, 2026 AT SEA -- --Thu, Oct 22, 2026 KUSADASI, TURKEY (FOR EPHESUS) 7:00 am 6:00 pmFri, Oct 23, 2026 MYKONOS, GREECE 7:00 am 9:00 pmSat, Oct 24, 2026 ATHENS (PIRAEUS), GREECE 6:00 am 7:00 pmSun, Oct 25, 2026 AT SEA -- --Mon, Oct 26, 2026 BAR, MONTENEGRO 7:30 am 6:00 pmTue, Oct 27, 2026 CORFU, GREECE 8:00 am 5:00 pmWed, Oct 28, 2026 SICILY (MESSINA), ITALY 9:00 am 7:00 pmThu, Oct 29, 2026 NAPLES, ITALY (FOR CAPRI & POMPEII) 7:00 am 7:00 pmFri, Oct 30, 2026 AT SEA -- --Sat, Oct 31, 2026 BARCELONA, SPAIN 6:00 am --
Port
Arrival Port
Come feel the love on a Princess cruise. We’ll give you the MedallionClass experience others simply can’t, and it’s exclusively for everyone. Not to mention sharing all our favorite destinations and bringing you the best experiences around each and every one of them. With multicourse meals to remember, Broadway-style shows, comedy acts and bands, and comfortable staterooms featuring the Princess Luxury Bed – all included in one of the best vacation values around. Because The Love Boat promises something for everyone.
Service that's all about making you feel special
With the MedallionClass experience, we’ve made the service guests love even better. It goes beyond knowing your name. It’s surprising you on your birthday. Knowing you take cinnamon in your latte and bringing you that latte anywhere. It’s addressing any concerns right now, not later, maybe even before you ask. Anyone can say their crew is like family. So we don’t say it; our guests do.
Vacation at a value
A cruise with Princess isn’t just a chance to connect with your favorite people and the world. It’s one of the best vacation values around. Exploring multiple destinations yet only unpacking once. Multicourse meals to remember. Broadway-style shows, comedy acts and bands. A comfortable stateroom perfect for unwinding. And the best part? You get it all for a fraction of what you'd spend on a land-based vacation.
- Year Built: 2023
- Inaugural Cruise: 2024
- Guest Capacity: 4,300
- Number of Decks: 21
- Length: 1,133 ft.
- Tonnage: 175,500
Please note: Stateroom images and features are samples only. Actual furniture, fixtures, colors, configurations and window/porthole views may vary.
Deck 17
Your days ashore are invitations to adventure, education and the pure pleasure of seeing things you've only read about before. Visit castles, museums and galleries. Explore ancient cities through winding canals. From glorious gardens and gilded theaters to famous boulevards and fabled landmarks, you're in for a picture-perfect experience.
Barcelona is the cultural heartland of Spain, yet its first language is Catalan, the native tongue of the proudly independent Catalonia region. Stroll down the shady, tree-lined Ramblas between street musicians and elegant bistros. Then perhaps visit the venerable Gothic cathedral, Picasso Museum or enjoy the architectural genius of Antonio Gaudi's Church of the Holy Family.
...full of flea markets that are a shopper's paradise... great beaches, a zigzagging coastline, cliffs, and secluded bays. The nights on Ibiza are temperate in terms of degrees, but sizzling as far as the nightlife is concerned... Ibiza draws crowds of both conservative tourists and outrageously wild partiers.
Marseille is France's second largest city, but it often goes unnoticed and unvisited by travelers... They are missing out on one of France's most diverse cities, both in terms of people and activities... Today, Marseille faces the same problems as any growing city. Crime is an issue, as is racial tension between the native French population and the arriving North African immigrants. Twenty-five percent of the population in Marseille is of North African descent, and that number is growing. But the city has come to embrace its newfound diversity, and is eager to put its best foot forward to attract a piece of the ever-growing tourism industry.
On the French island of Corsica, Ajaccio is famous as the birthplace of Napoleon. Visit the Bonaparte family home and the 16th century church where he was baptized. Or, take a tour into the wild and rugged outback countryside they call the maquis.
Christopher Columbus hailed from Genoa "the Proud," which enjoys one of the most illustrious maritime histories in all of Italy. It also features the largest medieval city center in Europe as well as Renaissance palaces that once enthralled Rubens and Van Dyck. From here, you can take an excursion to Milan, Italy's vibrant epicenter of fashion, business and the arts, to feast your eyes on The Last Supper and tour the grand opera house of La Scala. Or, enjoy a trip to Portofina, the most picturesque resort on the Italian Riviera.
From Livorno (Leghorn), your path leads through the rolling green hills of Tuscany to Florence, the flower of the Renaissance. The creative explosion happened right here, with masterworks by Michelangelo, Brunelleschi and Botticelli now landmarks of daily life. Ufizzi, Academmia, il Duomo: the art treasures of a golden age are commonplace to blessed Florentines.
The port of Civitavecchia is the gateway to The Eternal City, where all roads lead. Mad traffic careens past monuments of the great civilizations of the past. You will want to see it all: the soaring inspiration of St. Peter's, the Vatican and the Sistine Chapel; the flow of life along the Spanish Steps, the Coliseum, the Via Veneto and Trevi Fountain. Be sure to leave time for la dolce vita in one of the piazzas.
One of the most spectacular bays in the world lies in the shadow of Mt. Vesuvius. Visit the San Carlo Opera House and the cathedral of San Janarious, or tour the ancient ruins in the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum.
This charming, picturesque resort where Antony and Cleopatra used to vacation is best known as the port for the ancients ruins of Ephesus - one of the world's most wondrous archaeological sites. Explorations should include such masterpieces as the Great Amphitheatre, where St. Paul addressed the Ephesians, the Library of Celsus, and the temples of Athena and Apollo - all connected by marble streets rutted by the wheels of countless chariots.
The narrow passageways of Mykonos are a twisted maze of whitewashed houses, miniature churches, lazy windmills, and tiny cafes serving up Greek specialties. Sample the freshest squid or lobster just snatched from the blue Aegean Sea, or shop for typical flokati rugs.
Piraeus is the seaport for Athens, the capital of western civilization, which boasts a fantastic mix of classical ruins and vivacious modern life. In a single day, you can climb the hill of the Acropolis to wonder at the Parthenon, join the lively Athenians in Constitution Square, and then find a welcoming taverna for some spirited bizouki music, plenty of ouzo to drink, and with luck, energetic Greek dancing.
Though once ruled by Venetian doges, Turkish sultans and French invaders, today's Corfiot citizen is as Greek as they come. Marvel at the 17th-century icons in St. George's Church, the medieval Palace of Phrourio or the 19th-century Achilleion Palace. The greenest of the Greek Isles, Corfu also boasts thriving vineyards and olive orchards among its rugged mountains.
The setting for Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, Messina has much to offer in the way of history. Its dramatic, boulder-filled harbor has challenged navigators since the days of Ulysses. Try to visit the city's Bell Tower at the stroke of noon--the hour when one of the world's largest and most fanciful mechanical clocks springs into action. Messina's museum is also noteworthy for its Renaissance masterworks.