Price based on lowest available cruise only fare for double occupancy. Subject to change at any time.
Queen Victoria will delight you with her special appeal, where elegance and unique features combine seamlessly with outstanding hospitality. You'll discover an extraordinary way to see the world.
From the moment you step on board, you're immersed in an enchanting world of pleasure and escapism. Pass leisurely days soaking up the sunshine or gazing out at the tranquil ocean from her light-filled Winter Garden. Learn something new with our Cunard Insights speakers, or simply unwind with a good read. As evening falls, choose from a delectable array of dining options, and enjoy world-class entertainment in the Royal Court Theatre. On Queen Victoria the freedom to create your perfect trip is all yours.
Cruise ID: 56167
| Date | Time | Price * | Booking |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 August 2026 | €1,384 | Call us to book |
* Price based on lowest available cruise only fare for double occupancy. Subject to change at any time.
Approximately 159 sq. ft.
Our spacious Britannia Single Inside staterooms are a haven of comfort and style to enjoy during your voyage. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Single Inside stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 133-168 sq. ft.
Positioned to offer sea views, our Britannia Single Oceanview staterooms provide a private enclave from which to watch the world go by. Perfectly framed views are the backdrop to thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Single Oceanview stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 197-201 sq. ft.
Positioned to offer sea views, our Britannia Oceanview staterooms provide a private enclave from which to watch the world go by. Perfectly framed views are the backdrop to thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Oceanview stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 152 sq. ft.
With a variety of locations to choose from on board, our well-appointed Britannia Standard Inside staterooms are a haven of comfort and style to enjoy during your voyage. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Standard Inside stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 228-408 sq. ft.
Enjoy access to private, outdoor space in one of our obstructed view Britannia Balcony staterooms. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Balcony (obstructed view) stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 228-408 sq. ft.
Enjoy access to private, outdoor space in one of our obstructed view Britannia Balcony staterooms. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Balcony (obstructed view) stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 200-243 sq. ft.
With a variety of locations to choose from on board, our spacious Britannia Deluxe Inside staterooms are a haven of comfort and style to enjoy during your voyage. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Deluxe Inside stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 254-470 sq. ft.
Take advantage of prime sea views from your own private, outdoor space in one of our Britannia Club Balcony staterooms. You'll find thoughtful features, luxurious amenities and benefits, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Club Balcony stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 228-408 sq. ft.
Enjoy access to private, outdoor space in one of our obstructed view Britannia Balcony staterooms. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 228-472 sq. ft.
Drink in sparkling sea views from your own private, outdoor space in one of our Britannia Balcony staterooms. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Britannia Balcony stateroom includes:
Charges apply to room service after 10:00 AM.
Approximately 335-513 sq. ft.
Delight in a prime location on board with sea views that can be enjoyed from both in and outside your Princess Suite. You'll find thoughtful features and luxurious amenities, all organised by your dedicated steward to ensure you are always attentively looked after.
Each Princess Grill Suite includes:
Approximately 1100 sq. ft.
Retreat to an exclusive world of luxury with your own private residence at sea. Bold Cunard accent colours and thoughtful designs bring each space in your suite to life. An attentive butler is on hand at all times to truly customise your voyage experience.
Each Queens Grill Master Suite includes:
Approximately 484-596 sq. ft.
Retreat to an exclusive world of luxury with your own private residence at sea. Bold Cunard accent colours and thoughtful designs bring each space in your suite to life. An attentive butler is on hand at all times to truly customise your voyage experience.
Each Queens Grill Penthouse Suite includes:
Approximately 1319-1555 sq. ft.
Retreat to an exclusive world of luxury with your own private residence at sea. Striking interior designs bring each space in your suite to life, indulging your senses with a rich tapestry of colours, materials, and art. An attentive butler is on hand at all times to truly customise your voyage experience.
The Queens Grill Grand Suite includes:
Approximately 484-757 sq. ft.
Retreat to an exclusive world of luxury with your own private residence at sea. Bold Cunard accent colours and thoughtful designs bring each space in your suite to life. An attentive butler is on hand at all times to truly customise your voyage experience.
Each Queens Grill Suite includes:
Day 1 Civitavecchia, Italy
Italy's vibrant capital lives in the present, but no other city on earth evokes its past so powerfully. For over 2,500 years, emperors, popes, artists, and common citizens have left their mark here. Archaeological remains from ancient Rome, art-stuffed churches, and the treasures of Vatican City vie for your attention, but Rome is also a wonderful place to practice the Italian-perfected il dolce far niente, the sweet art of idleness. Your most memorable experiences may include sitting at a caffè in the Campo de' Fiori or strolling in a beguiling piazza.
Day 2 Cruising
Day 3 Tarragona, Spain
Day 4 Palma de Mallorca, Spain
If you look north of the cathedral (La Seu, or the seat of the bishopric, to Mallorcans) on a map of the city of Palma, you can see around the Plaça Santa Eulàlia a jumble of tiny streets that made up the earliest settlement. Farther out, a ring of wide boulevards traces the fortifications built by the Moors to defend the larger city that emerged by the 12th century. The zigzags mark the bastions that jutted out at regular intervals. By the end of the 19th century, most of the walls had been demolished; the only place where you can still see the massive defenses is at Ses Voltes, along the seafront west of the cathedral.A torrent (streambed) used to run through the middle of the old city, dry for most of the year but often a raging flood in the rainy season. In the 17th century it was diverted to the east, along the moat that ran outside the city walls. Two of Palma's main arteries, La Rambla and the Passeig d'es Born, now follow the stream's natural course. The traditional evening paseo (promenade) takes place on the Born.If you come to Palma by car, park in the garage beneath the Parc de la Mar (the ramp is just off the highway from the airport, as you reach the cathedral) and stroll along the park. Beside it run the huge bastions guarding the Almudaina Palace; the cathedral, golden and massive, rises beyond. Where you exit the garage, there's a ceramic mural by the late Catalan artist and Mallorca resident Joan Miró, facing the cathedral across the pool that runs the length of the park.If you begin early enough, a walk along the ramparts at Ses Voltes from the mirador beside the cathedral is spectacular. The first rays of the sun turn the upper pinnacles of La Seu bright gold and then begin to work their way down the sandstone walls. From the Parc de la Mar, follow Avinguda Antoni Maura past the steps to the palace. Just below the Plaça de la Reina, where the Passeig d'es Born begins, turn left on Carrer de la Boteria into the Plaça de la Llotja (if the Llotja itself is open, don't miss a chance to visit—it's the Mediterranean's finest Gothic-style civic building). From there stroll through the Plaça Drassana to the Museu d'Es Baluard, at the end of Carrer Sant Pere. Retrace your steps to Avinguda Antoni Maura. Walk up the Passeig d'es Born to Plaça Joan Carles I, then right on Avenida de La Unió.
Day 5 Cruising
Day 6 Villefranche-sur-Mer, France
Villefranche-Sur-Mer is located on the Côte d'Azur in Provence – known for its fields of lavender and warm weather – and is highly appreciated for its 14th Century architecture.
Day 7 Marseille, France
Since being designated a European Capital of Culture for 2013, with an estimated €660 million of funding in the bargain, Marseille has been in the throes of an extraordinary transformation, with no fewer than five major new arts centers, a beautifully refurbished port, revitalized neighborhoods, and a slew of new shops and restaurants. Once the underdog, this time-burnished city is now welcoming an influx of weekend tourists who have colonized entire neighborhoods and transformed them into elegant pieds-à-terre (or should we say, mer). The second-largest city in France, Marseille is one of Europe's most vibrant destinations. Feisty and fond of broad gestures, it is also as complicated and as cosmopolitan now as it was when a band of Phoenician Greeks first sailed into the harbor that is today's Vieux Port in 600 BC. Legend has it that on that same day a local chieftain's daughter, Gyptis, needed to choose a husband, and her wandering eyes settled on the Greeks' handsome commander Protis. Her dowry brought land near the mouth of the Rhône, where the Greeks founded Massalia, the most important Continental shipping port in antiquity. The port flourished for some 500 years as a typical Greek city, enjoying the full flush of classical culture, its gods, its democratic political system, its sports and theater, and its naval prowess. Caesar changed all that, besieging the city in 49 BC and seizing most of its colonies. In 1214 Marseille was seized again, this time by Charles d'Anjou, and was later annexed to France by Henri IV in 1481, but it was not until Louis XIV took the throne that the biggest transformations of the port began; he pulled down the city walls in 1666 and expanded the port to the Rive Neuve (New Riverbank). The city was devastated by plague in 1720, losing more than half its population. By the time of the Revolution, Marseille was on the rebound once again, with industries of soap manufacturing and oil processing flourishing, encouraging a wave of immigration from Provence and Italy. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, Marseille became the greatest boomtown in 19th-century Europe. With a large influx of immigrants from areas as exotic as Tangiers, the city quickly acquired the multicultural population it maintains to this day.
Day 8 Barcelona, Spain
The infinite variety of street life, the nooks and crannies of the medieval Barri Gòtic, the ceramic tile and stained glass of Art Nouveau facades, the art and music, the throb of street life, the food (ah, the food!)—one way or another, Barcelona will find a way to get your full attention. The capital of Catalonia is a banquet for the senses, with its beguiling mix of ancient and modern architecture, tempting cafés and markets, and sun-drenched Mediterranean beaches. A stroll along La Rambla and through waterfront Barceloneta, as well as a tour of Gaudí's majestic Sagrada Famíliaand his other unique creations, are part of a visit to Spain's second-largest city. Modern art museums and chic shops call for attention, too. Barcelona's vibe stays lively well into the night, when you can linger over regional wine and cuisine at buzzing tapas bars.
The Department of Foreign Affairs has up-to-date advice for Irish citizens on staying safe and healthy abroad. For more security, local laws, health, passport and visa information see https://www.ireland.ie/en/dfa/overseas-travel/ and follow dfatravelwise