Price based on lowest available cruise only fare for double occupancy. Subject to change at any time.
The Azamara Quest is a mid-sized ship with a deck plan that's intimate but never crowded, and offers everything modern cruisers are looking for—plus some unexpected extras.
Cruise ID: 78911
AzAmazing Evenings®
One-of-a-kind, complimentary, immersive cultural experiences exclusively created for Azamara guests, continuing our commitment to Destination Immersion®. First launched in 2011 to inspire guests to dive deeper into the heart of each destination, these extraordinary evenings showcase music, art, and culinary traditions in unique settings where authentic culture truly comes alive.?
Most AzAmazing Evenings® take place ashore, often in iconic venues while the ship stays late in port, aligning with our hallmark of Destination Immersion®, bringing guests closer to local culture in remarkable locations. On select occasions, including seven- and eight-night itineraries, equally captivating experiences are brought onboard.
*For sailings of 9 nights or longer, exceptions may occur when local infrastructure does not allow for an onshore event; in such cases, the experience will be hosted onboard. In rare cases—such as select transoceanic crossings or charters—AzAmazing Evenings® will not be offered
Onboard gratuities are always included.
| Date | Time | Price * | Booking |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30 July 2028 | 18:00 | €3,420 | Call us to book |
* Price based on lowest available cruise only fare for double occupancy. Subject to change at any time.
Step outside to your private veranda and take in fresh sea breezes and ever-changing views. Thoughtful design, polished finishes, and attentive service create a relaxing retreat between immersive days ashore.
Stateroom Features
Included Stateroom Amenities
The Panorama Suite introduces a new pinnacle of onboard living, offering expansive interiors, generous living and dining space, and sweeping panoramic views. Designed for guests seeking the most immersive and elevated suite experience at sea.
Suite Features
Spacious living room with a separate master bedroom
A signature expression of Azamara Cruises' refined luxury, the World Owner's Suite features a spacious layout, a separate bedroom, and a large private veranda. Thoughtfully designed for guests who value privacy, comfort, and elevated living.
Suite Features
Included Amenities
The suites offer a generous space to relax, with a separate living area, a dedicated bedroom, and a private veranda. An inviting retreat that balances comfort, functionality, and classic suite-style living.
Step outside to your private veranda and take in fresh sea breezes and ever-changing views. Thoughtful design, polished finishes, and attentive service create a relaxing retreat between immersive days ashore.
Wake up to natural light and picturesque ocean views from your window.
Featuring contemporary design and well-appointed comforts, these staterooms offer a serene and stylish place to unwind at sea.
A quiet, comfortable retreat designed for restful nights and relaxing moments between adventures. With refined décor, plush amenities, and personalized service, it's boutique-hotel comfort at sea.
The Grandview Suite blends refined contemporary design with floor-to-ceiling views and an expanded, spa-like bathroom. Thoughtfully designed to maximize light and comfort, offering a modern suite experience with select amenities.
Suite Features
Included Suite Amenities
The Ocean Suite offers generous space to relax, with a separate living area, a dedicated bedroom, and a private veranda. An inviting retreat that balances comfort, functionality, and classic suite-style living.
Suite Features
Included Amenities
Designed for relaxation and renewal, the Spa Suite features a spacious layout with spa-inspired touches, including a glass-enclosed soaking tub and convenient access to the spa. A calming retreat ideal for wellness- focused travelers.
Suite Features
Included Amenities
Spacious and comfortable, our Club Continent Suites feature fresh new décor inspired by natural elements. With two beds convertible to a queen, a cozy sitting area, breezy balcony and refreshed bathroom with a bathtub or shower, this is your wonderful, refined home away from home.
Suite Features
Included Amenities
Enjoy open-air living with sweeping ocean and destination views, plus added perks designed to elevate your onboard experience. It's everything you love about a Veranda Stateroom, with a little extra - at exceptional value.
Stateroom Features
Included Stateroom Amenities
Enjoy open-air living with sweeping ocean and destination views, plus added perks designed to elevate your onboard experience. It's everything you love about a Veranda Stateroom, with a little extra - at exceptional value.
A quiet, comfortable retreat designed for restful nights and relaxing moments between adventures. With refined décor, plush amenities, and personalized service, it's boutique-hotel comfort at sea.
Stateroom Features
Included Stateroom Amenities
Wake up to natural light and picturesque ocean views from your window.
Featuring contemporary design and well-appointed comforts, these staterooms offer a serene and stylish place to unwind at sea.
Stateroom Features
Included Stateroom Amenities
Day 1 Copenhagen, Denmark
By the 11th century, Copenhagen was already an important trading and fishing centre and today you will find an attractive city which, although the largest in Scandinavia, has managed to retain its low-level skyline. Discover some of the famous attractions including Gefion Fountain and Amalienborg Palace, perhaps cruise the city's waterways, visit Rosenborg Castle or explore the medieval fishing village of Dragoer. Once the home of Hans Christian Andersen, Copenhagen features many reminders of its fairytale heritage and lives up to the reputation immortalised in the famous song ‘Wonderful Copenhagen'.
Day 2 Berlin, Germany
Day 3 Rønne, Denmark
Day 4 Gdansk, Poland
Day 5 Liepaja, Latvia
Day 6 Cruising
Day 7 Kotka, Finland
Day 8 Helsinki, Finland
A city of the sea, Helsinki was built along a series of oddly shaped peninsulas and islands jutting into the Baltic coast along the Gulf of Finland. Streets and avenues curve around bays, bridges reach to nearby islands, and ferries ply among offshore islands.Having grown dramatically since World War II, Helsinki now absorbs more than one-tenth of the Finnish population. The metro area covers 764 square km (474 square miles) and 315 islands. Most sights, hotels, and restaurants cluster on one peninsula, forming a compact central hub. The greater Helsinki metropolitan area, which includes Espoo and Vantaa, has a total population of more than a million people.Helsinki is a relatively young city compared with other European capitals. In the 16th century, King Gustav Vasa of Sweden decided to woo trade from the Estonian city of Tallinn and thus challenge the Hanseatic League's monopoly on Baltic trade. Accordingly, he commanded the people of four Finnish towns to pack up their belongings and relocate to the rapids on the River Vantaa. The new town, founded on June 12, 1550, was named Helsinki.For three centuries, Helsinki (Helsingfors in Swedish) had its ups and downs as a trading town. Turku, to the west, remained Finland's capital and intellectual center. However, Helsinki's fortunes improved when Finland fell under Russian rule as an autonomous grand duchy. Czar Alexander I wanted Finland's political center closer to Russia and, in 1812, selected Helsinki as the new capital. Shortly afterward, Turku suffered a disastrous fire, forcing the university to move to Helsinki. The town's future was secure.Just before the czar's proclamation, a fire destroyed many of Helsinki's traditional wooden structures, precipitating the construction of new buildings suitable for a nation's capital. The German-born architect Carl Ludvig Engel was commissioned to rebuild the city, and as a result, Helsinki has some of the purest neoclassical architecture in the world. Add to this foundation the influence of Stockholm and St. Petersburg with the local inspiration of 20th-century Finnish design, and the result is a European capital city that is as architecturally eye-catching as it is distinct from other Scandinavian capitals. You are bound to discover endless engaging details—a grimacing gargoyle; a foursome of males supporting a balcony's weight on their shoulders; a building painted in striking colors with contrasting flowers in the windows. The city's 400 or so parks make it particularly inviting in summer.Today, Helsinki is still a meeting point of eastern and western Europe, which is reflected in its cosmopolitan image, the influx of Russians and Estonians, and generally multilingual population. Outdoor summer bars ("terrassit" as the locals call them) and cafés in the city center are perfect for people watching on a summer afternoon.
Day 9 Tallinn, Estonia
Estonia's history is sprinkled liberally with long stretches of foreign domination, beginning in 1219 with the Danes, followed without interruption by the Germans, Swedes, and Russians. Only after World War I, with Russia in revolutionary wreckage, was Estonia able to declare its independence. Shortly before World War II, in 1940, that independence was usurped by the Soviets, who—save for a brief three-year occupation by Hitler's Nazis—proceeded to suppress all forms of national Estonian pride for the next 50 years. Estonia finally regained independence in 1991. In the early 1990s, Estonia's own Riigikogu (Parliament), not some other nation's puppet ruler, handed down from the Upper City reforms that forced Estonia to blaze its post-Soviet trail to the European Union. Estonia has been a member of the EU since 2004, and in 2011, the country and its growing economy joined the Eurozone. Tallinn was also named the European City of Culture in 2011, cementing its growing reputation as a cultural hot spot.
Day 10 Mariehamn, Åland Islands
Mariehamn is the capital of the fractured Åland Islands, an autonomous region of Finland, which encompasses some 6,700 islands and skerries, which spray out across the Gulf of Bothnia towards Sweden. There's ample opportunity to stretch your legs here, with every outdoor activity imaginable available, and you can breathe in the freshest sea air you've ever tasted, as you kayak between islands, stroll flower-speckled fields, and sizzle in outdoor hot tubs. Known for being one of the Baltic's sunniest destinations, you'll also find a healthy supply of charming beaches, where you can lap up the rays. The region serves as a gateway to the Gulf, and has been a key witness to countless struggles and tussles over the years. It has a proud maritime heritage, and you can take a voyage through the exhibitions of the Aland Maritime Museum to learn more. See the genuine pirate flag on display - which is one of only three known to still be in existence. Its ominous skull and crossbones are sure to shiver your timbers. You can also experience life aboard an ocean-faring ship from Mariehamn's past, as you climb aboard the mighty, four-masted Pommern windjammer ship, which was donated to the museum once World War II had concluded.
Day 11 Stockholm, Sweden
Stockholm is a city in the flush of its second youth. Since the mid-1990s, Sweden's capital has emerged from its cold, Nordic shadow to take the stage as a truly international city. What started with entry into the European Union in 1995 gained pace with the extraordinary IT boom of the late 1990s, strengthened with the Skype-led IT second wave of 2003, and solidified with the hedge-fund invasion that is still happening today as Stockholm gains even more global confidence. And despite more recent economic turmoil, Stockholm's 1 million or so inhabitants have, almost as one, realized that their city is one to rival Paris, London, New York, or any other great metropolis.With this realization comes change. Stockholm has become a city of design, fashion, innovation, technology, and world-class food, pairing homegrown talent with an international outlook. The streets are flowing with a young and confident population keen to drink in everything the city has to offer. The glittering feeling of optimism, success, and living in the here and now is rampant in Stockholm.Stockholm also has plenty of history. Positioned where the waters of Lake Mälaren rush into the Baltic, it's been an important trading site and a wealthy international city for centuries. Built on 14 islands joined by bridges crossing open bays and narrow channels, Stockholm boasts the story of its history in its glorious medieval old town, grand palaces, ancient churches, sturdy edifices, public parks, and 19th-century museums—its history is soaked into the very fabric of its airy boulevards, built as a public display of trading glory.
Day 12 Stockholm, Sweden
Stockholm is a city in the flush of its second youth. Since the mid-1990s, Sweden's capital has emerged from its cold, Nordic shadow to take the stage as a truly international city. What started with entry into the European Union in 1995 gained pace with the extraordinary IT boom of the late 1990s, strengthened with the Skype-led IT second wave of 2003, and solidified with the hedge-fund invasion that is still happening today as Stockholm gains even more global confidence. And despite more recent economic turmoil, Stockholm's 1 million or so inhabitants have, almost as one, realized that their city is one to rival Paris, London, New York, or any other great metropolis.With this realization comes change. Stockholm has become a city of design, fashion, innovation, technology, and world-class food, pairing homegrown talent with an international outlook. The streets are flowing with a young and confident population keen to drink in everything the city has to offer. The glittering feeling of optimism, success, and living in the here and now is rampant in Stockholm.Stockholm also has plenty of history. Positioned where the waters of Lake Mälaren rush into the Baltic, it's been an important trading site and a wealthy international city for centuries. Built on 14 islands joined by bridges crossing open bays and narrow channels, Stockholm boasts the story of its history in its glorious medieval old town, grand palaces, ancient churches, sturdy edifices, public parks, and 19th-century museums—its history is soaked into the very fabric of its airy boulevards, built as a public display of trading glory.
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