Categories: Cruise News

Norwegian Cruise Line needs restart permission by June to fully resume cruises by 2022

Norwegian Cruise Line needs to get permission from the CDC to resume cruising in the United States by June or July, in order to have its full fleet back in service by the beginning of 2022.

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings CEO and President Frank Del Rio said during the company’s earnings call that there was a 90-day window to resume US cruise services, with the company needing permission from the CDC by July at the latest in order to be at full capacity by 2022.

Norwegian Jade in Dubai. NCL expects to sail with 50% occupancy initially.

RELATED: Norwegian Cruise Line first to detail anti-COVID-19 measures aboard ship

RELATED: Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Line may drop cruise ship buffet

This is because the cruise company will need at least three months to get its first ship back to sea after receiving permission from the CDC, and will then likely only be able to add one ship into service per week.

Del Rio’s comments came just days after Norwegian Cruise Line announced that it was suspending cruise services through May 31st, 2021 – joining several other cruise lines that have recently suspended operations further amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The CDC in October dropped its No Sail Order for cruise ships operating to or from US ports, announcing instead a Conditional Sailing Order that would see every ship individually assessed for compliance with anti-COVID-19 measures.

Cruise lines indicated at the time that it would likely take several months to bring their fleets into compliance, and now, with case numbers in the US remaining stubbornly high, and growing talk of passengers potentially requiring vaccination before sailing, all US cruises remain suspended.

Racetrack aboard Norwegian Joy.

RELATED: CDC to require mandatory mask-wearing aboard all cruise ships sailing from US

RELATED: CDC issues travel advisory against US cruises after cancelling No Sail Order

The conditional sail order has also been more difficult than the industry expected, according to Del Rio.

“The prevalence of the disease will be best indicator when we can being cruising,” Del Rio noted. “And we are seeing a significant drop in cases and more vaccinations which point to the prevalence dropping.”

When Norwegian Cruise Line does eventually resume cruises, Del Rio said its ships would likely sail with 50% occupancy

He added that the bookings for 2022 were very encouraging with his three brands, Norwegian, Oceania and Regent 40 percent booked at this time, which is better than any previous years, with pricing in line with 2019.

Shaun Ebelthite

Founder and editor of Cruise Arabia & Africa. I try to create the best news and information specifically for cruise passengers taking cruises to and from Dubai (where I live) and South Africa (where I was born). You can contact me at shaun(at)cruisearabiaonline.com.

Recent Posts

Alexandria strengthens cruise ambitions with calls by Aroya and Seven Seas Grandeur

Alexandria Port in Egypt welcomed more than 4,300 passengers and crew across two cruise calls…

2 days ago

Saudi-owned Aman at Sea considering Madeira port calls for Amangati from 2028

Aman at Sea is exploring the possibility of including Madeira in future itineraries. (more…)

3 days ago

MSC Cruises to debut longest dry slide at sea aboard MSC World Asia

MSC Cruises has unveiled new details of The Spiral @ Tree of Life, the longest…

3 days ago

Margaritaville at Sea reveals new production shows for Beachcomber debut

Margaritaville at Sea has revealed three new original production shows for its new flagship, Beachcomber.…

4 days ago

Crystal reveals new Bistro concept for Crystal Grace ahead of debut

Crystal has released new renderings of The Bistro aboard its upcoming cruise ship Crystal Grace.…

4 days ago

AROYA Cruises to screen FIFA World Cup matches during Mediterranean season

Guests aboard AROYA Cruises will be able to watch the 2026 FIFA World Cup while…

5 days ago