Cruise Lifestyle

Seabourn rolls out fleetwide dining updates across Square and Colonnade

Seabourn is introducing a series of culinary changes across its fleet, focused on expanded menus in Seabourn Square and revised daytime dining in the Colonnade restaurant, with the programme scheduled to be completed during 2026.

The updates apply across both the line’s ocean and expedition ships and form part of an ongoing refresh of onboard services rather than a structural refit. The company indicated further culinary changes will follow later in the year.

“At Seabourn, culinary is one of the most meaningful ways we connect guests with the destinations they explore,” said Mark Tamis, President, Seabourn.

Seabourn Quest cruise ship docked at a port next to waterfront buildings under a clear blue sky.
Seabourn Quest

Seabourn Square, positioned as a central social venue on the ships, has received an expanded all-day café offering.

New hot items include breakfast sandwiches, savoury quiche, and Roman-style pizza, alongside toasted sandwiches such as Monte Cristo and Croque Monsieur. These additions supplement the venue’s existing pastries and light meals.

Speciality coffee service has also been adjusted, with beans roasted on board and drinks available for advance ordering through the line’s mobile application.

The venue now operates with two service periods, a breakfast menu from early morning through mid-morning, followed by an all-day selection extending into late afternoon.

The programme also includes changes to tableware and signage, as well as additional bistro-style seating on certain ships. The rollout is being phased across the fleet with completion expected by mid-2026.

Separate changes affect the Colonnade, the ships’ buffet-style dining space, where daytime service has been reorganised around more made-to-order preparation.

Breakfast and lunch menus have been revised with a stronger emphasis on regional dishes and rotating daily options. Live cooking stations now form a larger part of service, including omelette preparation, carving stations, fresh fish dishes, and pressed juices.

An elegant restaurant deck with wicker chairs and tables set for dining, overlooking a scenic sea view at sunset.
The Colonnade

The Colonnade revisions have already been completed across the fleet. The changes aim to increase interaction between chefs and passengers while adjusting menus according to the areas visited during voyages.

Seabourn’s dining model remains included in the cruise fare, a structure typical of the luxury segment in which operators differentiate themselves through service levels and onboard amenities rather than additional charges for speciality restaurants.

The company noted that chefs regularly source ingredients ashore and incorporate regional recipes into menus depending on itinerary.

For the wider cruise industry, the updates reflect a broader trend among smaller luxury operators towards incremental onboard changes rather than large-scale refits.

Culinary programmes are frequently revised between new ship deliveries as companies attempt to maintain repeat passenger interest and align onboard offerings more closely with destination-focused itineraries.

The refresh affects multiple dining venues across the ships, including The Restaurant, Earth & Ocean, Sushi, Solis, The Patio, the Colonnade, and Seabourn Square.

While not altering ship capacity or layout, the changes illustrate how operators are increasingly using food service as a core component of onboard identity, particularly on smaller ships where public space additions are limited.

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