Passport Q
Jennifer Allen  May 21
5 MIN READ

The mainstream cruise industry is building bigger than ever. Ships carrying 5,000 passengers, private islands and onboard roller coasters have made scale the default language of cruise marketing. But among travelers willing to spend the most, something different is happening.

The mainstream cruise industry is building bigger than ever. Ships carrying 5,000 passengers, private islands and onboard roller coasters have made scale the default language of cruise marketing. But among travelers willing to spend the most, something different is happening.

New research from Internova Travel Group, one of the world's largest travel services companies, found that one-third of North American travelers now express interest in small-ship cruising. Among luxury and ultra-luxury travelers, the demand is stronger. The data, drawn from millions of bookings and a survey of 4,000 North American travelers, found expedition cruise prices have risen more than 20% since 2023, the largest price increase of any cruise category, and a reliable indication of demand outpacing supply.

Expedition and exploration cruising is the fastest-growing segment in the entire cruise sector, with passenger numbers up 42%, according to Cruise Lines International Association, or CLIA, a trend the association's 2026 report confirms is continuing.

Access is the new luxury

The organizing idea is the same across every operator driving this shift. A vessel carrying 36 guests instead of 3,600 can navigate a shallow river gorge in the Australian Kimberley, anchor overnight in a harbor closed to larger ships or sail into an Antarctic bay that mainstream itineraries will never reach. Small size is not a compromise in this market; it is the product.

The operators defining the category

SeaDream Yacht Club has been making this argument since before "expedition cruising" was a marketing term. The family-owned line, now celebrating more than 25 years, operates two intimate mega-yachts carrying just 112 guests each under a philosophy it calls "yachting, not cruising." That means overnight stays in secluded harbors, midnight departures from anchorages closed to larger ships and the kind of spontaneity only a small vessel can deliver. When conditions are right in the Caribbean, the captain anchors, deploys the onboard marina and hosts a Champagne & Caviar Splash with jet skis and an inflatable slide off the stern. Itineraries span the Mediterranean, Caribbean and Northern Europe.

At the far end of the expedition spectrum, Terra Nova Expeditions has launched what it calls the world's first cruise-sailing hybrid in Antarctica. The 20-day Ultimate Antarctic Adventure pairs a purpose-built expedition vessel with a six-day microexpedition aboard the intimate Icebird Yacht, which gives guests access to rarely visited bays and the ability to sail among icebergs well beyond any traditional Antarctic itinerary. The line carries a maximum of 98 guests and backs the adventure with its Antarctic Classroom, a structured onboard program pairing guests with scientists for real-time citizen science and sustainability education.

In Arctic Norway, Varg Sail Yacht takes intimacy to its logical conclusion. The 62-foot sailing yacht, operated by Norwegian outdoor brand Norrøna Adventure, accommodates just six guests across three cabins and earned a spot on TIME's World's Greatest Places list for 2026. Winter voyages center on whale watching and northern lights in the Barents Sea, while spring itineraries combine ski touring with coastal sailing through the Lyngen Alps. Summer shifts to the remote anchorages of the Lofoten archipelago. A wood-fired sauna and outdoor hot tub sit on a deck; the culinary program is built around foraged and locally sourced Arctic ingredients.

Sailuxe operates 13 premium Lagoon catamarans ranging from 51 to 65 feet across the Aeolian Islands, Sardinia's Costa Smeralda and the waters around Amalfi and Capri. Each vessel carries a crew trained to boutique hotel standards and a private chef certified through an exclusive partnership with the Gambero Rosso Academy, Italy's most respected culinary institution. Signature experiences vary by catamaran: cinema under the stars off one coast, private granita-making with a Sicilian producer off another. Bookings have grown 113% in the past two years.

Geography makes the case for small-ship cruising in British Columbia and Alaska. Maple Leaf Adventures operates in Haida Gwaii, the Great Bear Rainforest and remote Vancouver Island, places where cultural site access, wildlife sensitivity and permit structures cap group sizes by design. The company's luxury vessel, Cascadia, delivers spacious cabins, locally inspired design and highly personalized service in a market where the company says no comparable luxury offering exists.

True North Adventure Cruises has spent more than 35 years making the same argument along Australia's Kimberley coast. The 50-meter expedition vessel carries a maximum of 36 guests with a crew of 22, and its shallow draft allows it to navigate river systems and gorges that larger ships cannot physically enter. An onboard helicopter extends that reach further, lifting guests above Mitchell Falls and into the wilderness inaccessible by any other means. Chef-driven menus built on sustainable local ingredients, 18 en-suite staterooms and a $4 million fleet refit ahead of the 2026 season round out a product that holds full membership in Luxury Lodges of Australia.

Regent Seven Seas Cruises extends the access argument through time. Its new Legendary Voyages collection for 2028 includes the 101-night Grand Pathways of Europe and the 61-night Grand Silk Seas Passage, built around longer port stays and deeper destination immersion rather than maximizing ports visited. Shore excursions, fine dining and business-class air are all included, which lets travelers focus entirely on the places they are in rather than the logistics of getting there.

New Zealand's Heritage Expeditions brings 40-plus years of Southern Ocean expertise to the category's most remote itineraries. The second-generation family-owned operator sends its new vessel, Heritage Discoverer, on a 21-day preview voyage this November to the Antarctic Peninsula, South Georgia and the Falkland Islands, ahead of the ship's maiden 2027-28 season. A maximum of 130 expeditioners sail with an expedition team of 15 and 14 Zodiacs. South Georgia alone hosts penguin, seabird and fur seal populations numbering in the millions; early-season Antarctica delivers more than 20 hours of daylight each day.

Where the category is heading

CLIA projects expedition cruise capacity will grow 150% between 2019 and 2029, a figure that confirms this segment has moved well past niche status. The operators that see the sharpest demand share one advantage: a product that cannot be replicated at scale. The gorge, iceberg bay and remote anchorage belong only to the vessel small enough to reach them.

The real measure of luxury

The table stakes in high-end travel now are the suite, fine dining and personalized service. What this generation of small-ship operators is selling is something harder to manufacture: a berth on a vessel small enough to go where the crowds are not and, in some cases, where almost no one has gone before. In 2026, that is the most exclusive address at sea.

by Jennifer Allen

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Joseph Amato  May 23
1 MIN READ

From immersive workshops to world-class festivals, this is a city that invites you to do more than just visit.

Tucked into the heart of southwest Michigan, Kalamazoo is a vibrant town which blends creativity, culture, and community in a way that feels both refreshingly unpretentious and quietly progressive. Long known for its craft beverage scene and artistic spirit, Kalamazoo is increasingly becoming a destination for LGBTQ+ travelers seeking a welcoming Midwest escape filled with hands-on experiences, live performance, and meaningful connection.

by Joseph Amato

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Jennifer Allen  May 20
4 MIN READ

France welcomed 102 million international visitors in 2025, more than any country on earth. Most of them went to Paris. A major new study suggests they left without seeing one of the best parts of France: Nantes.

France welcomed 102 million international visitors in 2025, more than any country on earth. Most of them went to Paris. A major new study suggests they left without seeing one of the best parts of France: Nantes.

by Jennifer Allen

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Rio Yamat  May 19
4 MIN READ

The collapse of Spirit Airlines isn't the only curveball confronting people planning summer trips

Days after Spirit Airlines shut down in the middle of the night, a lawyer for the defunct budget carrier stood before a bankruptcy judge and apologized to the price-conscious customers who might struggle to find affordable flights in its absence.

by Rio Yamat

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Chris Tremblay  May 18
8 MIN READ

An hour up the coast from Salvador, the small resort town of Praia do Forte in Bahia, Brazil, is quietly emerging as a queer‑welcoming beach escape—without yet appearing on many mainstream LGBTQ+ travel lists.

On Brazil’s northeastern coast, past the industrial outskirts of Salvador and along a highway fringed with coconut groves, Praia do Forte appears almost abruptly: a compact pedestrian village of cobbled lanes, open‑air cafés and a long crescent of sand where surfers, families and queer couples share the same stretch of Atlantic shoreline.

by Chris Tremblay

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Chris Tremblay  May 16
5 MIN READ

Long known to insiders but still a surprise to many travelers, Ogunquit, Maine, is emerging as a small-town LGBTQ+-friendly escape where cliffs, beaches, art galleries, and queer-owned businesses coexist without the usual big-city fuss.

If Provincetown is the glittering extrovert of New England queer travel, Ogunquit is its softer-spoken cousin: still stylish, still celebratory, but happier to greet you with sea salt on the wind than a velvet rope. The Maine town has long been described as a refuge for LGBTQ+ travelers, and recent travel coverage continues to place it among North America’s under-the-radar queer-friendly destinations.

by Chris Tremblay

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Mandy Applegate  May 14
5 MIN READ

Search interest in slow travel hit an all-time high in 2026, according to Google's 2026 travel trends data, with searches for "slow travel Italy" alone climbing 100% in a single month. At the same time, bookings for trips of more than eight days grew by 19% compared to the prior year, which indicates a clear, measurable shift in how Americans choose to spend their time away.

Search interest in slow travel hit an all-time high in 2026, according to Google's 2026 travel trends data, with searches for "slow travel Italy" alone climbing 100% in a single month. At the same time, bookings for trips of more than eight days grew by 19% compared to the prior year, which indicates a clear, measurable shift in how Americans choose to spend their time away.

by Mandy Applegate

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Rio Yamat  May 6
3 MIN READ

Spirit Airlines has secured court approval to begin dismantling the once-busy budget carrier and sell its parts to pay creditors

The bright yellow planes are grounded. Now the selloff begins.

by Rio Yamat

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Mark Kennedy  May 5
1 MIN READ

A star-studded cruise ship featuring Broadway's biggest names is setting sail from Florida to Mexico and the Bahamas next spring

A star-studded cruise ship with some of Broadway's biggest names — including Tony Award-winners Patti LuPone, Darren Criss, Norbert Leo Butz and Adrienne Warren — is setting sail from Florida to Mexico and the Bahamas next spring.

by Mark Kennedy

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Aamer Madhani  May 2
2 MIN READ

Spirit Airlines has announced it is going out of business after 34 years

Spirit Airlines, an impish upstart that shook the industry with its irreverent ads and deep discount fares, announced Saturday that it has gone out of business after 34 years.

by Aamer Madhani

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.