Oceania Cruises has released its 2028 & 2029 Collection of Voyages, a dual-season programme comprising more than 230 itineraries scheduled across a wide range of global regions. The sailings, which range from 7 to 180 days, are now open for booking as of June 17th, 2026, giving guests and travel advisors an extended planning horizon for future travel.
The new deployment spans a broad geographic footprint, linking established maritime gateways such as Tokyo, New York, and Amsterdam with a wide spectrum of destination types, from major capitals to smaller coastal ports and remote island regions. The programme includes calls across Europe, Asia, Alaska, Australia and New Zealand, the Caribbean, and South America, with more than 60 itineraries incorporating overnight stays in port.
Across the collection, itineraries extend into regions such as the Eastern Mediterranean and the Japanese archipelago, the fjord systems of Northern Europe, the Indonesian islands, and the North Atlantic approaches to Iceland and Alaska. The structure of the programme places emphasis on extended time ashore, with repeated overnight calls designed to allow deeper access to urban centres and secondary ports that are less frequently included in conventional cruise schedules.
Company representatives described the new deployment as a continuation of Oceania Cruises’ destination-led operating model, noting that the inclusion of more than 60 overnight stays is intended to provide increased flexibility for guests to experience ports in greater depth, while the early release of two full seasons is intended to support long-term planning and itinerary selection.
A significant feature of the programme is the continued expansion of long-duration voyages. These include full circumnavigation-style itineraries aboard Oceania Aurelia, which will enter service with 180-day world cruises departing from both Miami and Los Angeles in 2028 and 2029, respectively, concluding in New York.
In Europe, the programme extends across both Mediterranean and Northern European waters, including winter-season operations that emphasise quieter port conditions and extended regional coverage. Calls are scheduled across Greece, Turkey, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia, and the Baltic region, with increased use of smaller ports alongside established capitals such as Lisbon, Copenhagen, and Bangkok.
Asia remains a central operational focus, with itineraries highlighting Japan’s secondary ports, including Ishigaki, Miyazaki, and Kagoshima, alongside major hubs such as Tokyo and Osaka. In parallel, Oceania Marina and Oceania Riviera continue regional deployment across Asia and Alaska, linking seasonal operations between hemispheres.
The South Pacific and Australasian programme includes passages through Milford Sound, Sydney, Melbourne, Auckland, and surrounding coastal regions, while Caribbean and Central American itineraries continue to combine island calls with Panama Canal transits. North American deployments include Canada and New England sailings during the autumn foliage season, alongside transoceanic repositioning voyages between the Atlantic and Pacific basins.
Oceania Cruises has also maintained its commercial policy framework for the collection, offering a Best Value Guarantee that allows guests to access improved promotional fares or equivalent onboard credits should pricing change prior to departure, alongside its standard inclusions covering dining, Wi-Fi, and gratuities.