Latin America’s Season Meets Mega Ships

Latin America’s Season Meets Mega Ships
January 29, 2026

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Latin America’s Season Meets Mega Ships

Key Points

  1. The 2026 newbuild wave adds about 33,000 berths, with investment estimated above $10 billion.
  2. Latin America is no longer just a stopover, as Brazil and Colombia scale ports and homeports.
  3. Cashless identities, immersive attractions, and Europe’s rising carbon costs are reshaping cruise economics.

Cruising enters 2026 with two stories moving together. One is a heavy delivery calendar of new ships. The other is how Latin America is positioning itself to capture more of the flow.

Industry trackers expect 14 new ships to enter service in 2026, adding roughly 33,000 berths. Some counts reach 15, depending on delivery timing and definitions. The investment tab is widely estimated above $10 billion.

The headline ships show the playbook. Royal Caribbean’s Legend of the Seas debuts in the Mediterranean in July 2026, then shifts to the Caribbean from Fort Lauderdale.

Cruising In 2026: Latin America’s Season Meets Mega Ships, Polar Demand, And Quiet Tech. (Photo Internet reproduction)

At about 250,800 gross tons and roughly 5,610 guests at double occupancy, it is built for peak pricing. MSC launches MSC World Asia on December 11, 2026, for seven-night Western Mediterranean sailings from Barcelona and Marseille.

It is LNG-powered and keeps the ship itself as the main attraction. Norwegian adds Norwegian Luna, listed around 3,550 guests, for a spring 2026 debut on seven-night Caribbean routes from Miami.

Latin America Cruise Season Booms

Latin America’s role sits inside that same yield hunt. Brazil’s 2025/2026 season runs through April 2026, with CLIA Brazil projecting more than 674,000 embarking travelers.

Recent CLIA-linked reporting also puts Brazil’s 2024/2025 season at 838,096 cruise passengers. Officials in Brasília have highlighted terminal upgrades as part of the pitch to lines and travelers.

In Bahia, the state projects more than 260,000 cruise visitors during the season. Colombia is scaling too. Cartagena projects about 442,740 passengers and crew for the 2025/26 season, with an estimated $52.9 million economic impact.

The wider regional network matters as well, with big lines selling South America deployments tied to Santos, Itajaí, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Maceió, Buenos Aires, and Montevideo.

Demand is also shifting to “rare” itineraries. Expedition and exploration cruising grew 22% from 2023 to 2024. Antarctica remains capped, with 118,162 travelers in 2024–25 and landing limits on ships above 500 passengers.

Event cruising adds another layer, with the total solar eclipse on August 12, 2026 driving sailings near Greenland, Iceland, and northern Spain.

Onboard, friction is being engineered out. Princess leans on a digital identity, while Virgin uses a wearable for access and spending. VR and simulator attractions are spreading, and they are designed for fast turnover.

Europe’s emissions costs are rising too. Maritime ETS obligations scale from 40% of 2024 emissions to 70% for 2025, moving toward full coverage from 2027.

In 2026, the winners will be operators and ports that treat compliance, infrastructure, and onboard revenue as one integrated system.

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