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LifestyleTravel & Leisure

What is a ‘micro cruise’? The rising trend of highly catered adventure-filled voyages

Smaller cruise ships offer luxury like huge liners but are able to access remote ports, allowing passengers to visit different holiday spots

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Aurora Expeditions’ Douglas Mawson has only 86 cabins. The ship is one of many that are part of a new trend in cruise holidays: highly catered adventure-seeking. Photo: Aurora Expeditions
Tribune News Service

Cruise ships these days are truly massive. Just this year, Royal Caribbean unveiled the Star of the Seas family holiday cruise liner. With a capacity of 5,610 passengers, the vessel has a “population” larger than many small towns.

But bigger is not always better. Smaller ships can offer the same luxury but with more adventures to explore.

According to the Cruise Lines International Association’s 2025 State of the Cruise Industry Report, more than 70 per cent of cruise ships sailing right now, and scheduled to sail, are small to midsize.
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Around 34 per cent of them host fewer than 1,000 guests each – about a fifth of what behemoths like the Star of the Seas carry.

Royal Caribbean’s Legend of the Seas (centre) will be the third ship in its Icon class following 2024’s Icon of the Seas and this year’s Star of the Seas. Photo: TNS
Royal Caribbean’s Legend of the Seas (centre) will be the third ship in its Icon class following 2024’s Icon of the Seas and this year’s Star of the Seas. Photo: TNS

Windstar Cruises’ Star Seeker, for instance, will embark for the first time this year, and it holds only 224 guests. Aurora Expeditions’ Douglas Mawson was built this year, too, and has only 86 cabins.

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