Caribbean Islander

Princess Cruises

Join Princess Cruises for a 12-night cruise departing from New York, visiting St Maarten, French Antilles, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, Curacao, Oranjestad, Aruba and Fort Lauderdale. Enjoy luxurious accommodations and world-class amenities.

Departure date

01 November 2025

Cabins

Inside from

1,052pp

Outside from

1,596pp

Balcony from

1,501pp

Suite from

2,089pp

The price displayed includes the cruise.
Airfare is additional.
Call us to add flights, hotels and transfers.

Quote Reference number: 350763-2129895

All prices are subject to availability

Your Holiday Summary

Departure - Arrival
01 Nov 2025 - 13 Nov 2025
Duration
13 days, 12 nights
Sailing
6 sea days
Departure Port
New York
Call us to quote and add flights

Travelling Itinerary

Day 1
New York

Departure: 01.11.2025 at 16:00

A leading global city, New York exerts a powerful influence over worldwide commerce, finance, culture and fashion, and entertainment. The city consists of five boroughs and an intricate patchwork of neighborhoods. Some of these include Lower Manhattan and the New York Stock Exchange, Battery Park and South Street Seaport, Chinatown, trendy SoHo and Greenwich Village, along with Little Italy, the flat Iron District and Gramercy Park. Famous Central Park covers 843 acres of paths, ponds, lakes and green space within the asphalt jungle. Many districts and landmarks have become well-known to outsiders. Nearly 170 languages are spoken in the city and over 35% of its population was born outside the United States.

Day 2
At Sea

Arrival: 02.11.2025
Departure: 02.11.2025

Day 3
At Sea

Arrival: 03.11.2025
Departure: 03.11.2025

Day 4
At Sea

Arrival: 04.11.2025
Departure: 04.11.2025

Day 5
St Maarten

Arrival: 05.11.2025 at 09:00
Departure: 05.11.2025 at 22:00

St. Maarten offers a delightful case of split personality. Legend has it that a Frenchman and a Dutchman divided ownership of the island through a walk-off: Standing back to back, the two headed in opposite directions, walking around the island until they met. Perhaps the Dutchman paused for a refreshing brew. At any rate, the French ended up claiming 21 square miles of the island to 16 square miles for the Dutch. This lively tale says much about St. Maarten's easygoing ways. No formal boundary exists between the Dutch and French sides of the island; a simple welcome sign tells you when you cross from one country to the other. But the differences are as noticeable as the spelling of the island's name. The French spell it St. Martin. And it's this split personality that lends so much to the island's charms, including an international reputation for the finest cuisine in the Caribbean.

Day 6
St. Kitts

Arrival: 06.11.2025 at 08:00
Departure: 06.11.2025 at 17:00

Jagged volcanoes soaring above azure and turquoise seas, dense rainforests in myriad shades of green, rolling fields of sugarcane--welcome to St. Kitts. Along with its neighbor, Nevis, St. Kitts presents an exotic landscape more common to Polynesia than the Caribbean. The islands' terrain, rich soil, and climate made them ideal locations for raising sugarcane. In fact, St. Kitts and Nevis were once the crown jewels of the Caribbean. During the 17th and 18th centuries, Spain, France and England vied for control of the islands, with the English finally winning out in 1787. Today, British and French heritage is evident on both islands. Basseterre, the capital of St. Kitts, boasts fine, restored colonial buildings. Impressive Brimstone Hill Fortress, called the "Gibraltar of the West Indies," is one of the most impressive fortresses in the Caribbean.

Day 7
St. Lucia

Arrival: 07.11.2025 at 08:00
Departure: 07.11.2025 at 18:00

Nestled below the Pitons, twin peaks rising over 2,600 feet above the azure waters of the Caribbean, St. Lucia is an oasis of tropical calm. The island's capital, Castries, is a town of charming, pastel-colored colonial buildings, home to some 60,000. Yet despite its peaceful setting, St. Lucia has a turbulent and colorful history. Fierce Carib warriors overran the peaceful Arawaks in the 9th century. The first European settler, Francois Le Clerc, was a French buccaneer. Le Clerc's countrymen followed in his wake, establishing the town of Soufriere in 1746. Sugar was the lure, sugar was king. Within four decades some 50 plantations flourished on the island. Thus St. Lucia became part of the Caribbean's 18th-century trade triangle of sugar, slavery, and rum. Today this beautiful island welcomes visitors drawn to its exotic tropical landscape, superb beaches, crystalline waters, and colorful marine life.

Day 8
At Sea

Arrival: 08.11.2025
Departure: 08.11.2025

Day 9
Curacao

Arrival: 09.11.2025 at 07:00
Departure: 09.11.2025 at 22:00

Historians still contend over which European adventurer first spied the largest island in the former Netherlands Antilles. Some historians claim the honor for Alonzo de Ojeda; other historians champion Amerigo Vespucci. Little does it matter; today's travelers are content to bask beneath sunny skies cooled by the trade winds. Lying some 40 miles off Venezuela, Curaçao boasts a landscape that is dramatic, stark, and volcanic. In contrast, Willemstad, the capital, seems a cozy Dutch haven with its neat row houses. And while those gabled and tiled roofs illustrate the island's heritage, the bright, pastel houses speak pure Caribbean. Islanders themselves reflect this same colorful contrast: over 50 different nationalities have come to call Curaçao their home.

Day 10
Aruba

Arrival: 10.11.2025 at 07:00
Departure: 10.11.2025 at 16:00

Dutch influence still lingers on this balmy Caribbean island, part of the former Netherlands Antilles until its independence in 1986. Aruba is a contrast: the island's arid interior is dotted with cactus and windswept divi-divi trees while secluded coves and sandy beaches make up its coast. Aruba's long and colorful heritage is reflected in its dialect. Called Papiamento, it is a tongue that combines elements of Spanish, French, Portuguese, Dutch, African and English.

Day 11
At Sea

Arrival: 11.11.2025
Departure: 11.11.2025

Day 12
At Sea

Arrival: 12.11.2025
Departure: 12.11.2025

Day 13
Ft. Lauderdale

Arrival: 13.11.2025 at 06:00

According to the popular 1960 beach movie, Fort Lauderdale is "where the boys are." The city's reputation as America's Spring Break capital, however, has been replaced with the more favorable image of a prime family tourist destination, attracting more than 10 million visitors annually. The most popular beach resort in Florida is even more rightly famed as the "Yachting Capital of the World," with more than 40,000 registered crafts calling its waters home. The city also prides itself on being the "Venice of America" with more than 300 miles of navigable waterways. Fort Lauderdale boasts world-class theaters, museums, sightseeing, and shopping.

Enchanted Princess

Enchanted Princess shares the spectacular style and luxury of our fleet and introduces new attractions all her own. Get ready for exquisite, one-of-a-kind dining experiences. The most pools and whirlpool hot tubs in our fleet. World-class entertainment venues hosting dazzling performances. As well as the breathtaking new Sky Suite, with expansive views from our largest balcony.

General characteristics

Ship name: Enchanted Princess
Length: 330.10 m (1,083 ft)
Capacity: 3,660 passengers
Total cabins: 1,830
Tonnage: 145,000 GT

Enchanted Princess