Fourth Prestige-Class Ship Joins Regent Seven Seas
Alexandra

Fincantieri will construct the fourth Prestige-Class vessel at its Italian shipyards with delivery slated for 2036, following a production cadence that places earlier sister ships in 2026, 2030 and 2033. Shipyard scheduling, keel-laying windows and long-lead procurement for engines, apartments of steel and interior fit-outs create a predictable logistics chain but also concentrate demand for specialist suppliers across the Mediterranean supply corridor.
Key timeline and build logistics
The Prestige-Class program has a staged delivery plan that influences yard capacity and berth allocation. Shipping components, from propulsion units to customized balcony glazing, are being sequenced to match the ramp-up for Seven Seas Prestige and its successors. That sequencing affects local supply chains, provisioning routes, and marine services including dry dock availability and tender operations.
| Year | Milestone | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Delivery – Seven Seas Prestige | All-balcony design; largest all-inclusive suite (Skyview Regent Suite) |
| 2030 | Second Prestige-Class delivery | Fleet expansion continues |
| 2033 | Third Prestige-Class delivery | Operational adjustments for itineraries |
| 2036 | Fourth Prestige-Class delivery | Further impacts on marinas and excursion providers |
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Design and guest capacity: space over volume
The new Prestige-Class vessels prioritise spaciousness: Seven Seas Prestige is reported to be about 40% larger than prior ships while accommodating only around 10% more guests. That delta signals a strategic emphasis on larger suites and public spaces rather than sheer passenger density — a choice that ripples through provisioning (more gourmet food per guest), crew-to-guest ratios and lifeboat/tender planning.\
Accommodation, dining and excursions
All suites on the lead ship are balcony-equipped, including the standout Skyview Regent Suite, billed as the largest all-inclusive suite in cruise history. Dining options number 11, including a new Mediterranean concept called Azure. The onboard program includes unlimited shore excursions and up to 97 included shore excursions per voyage, which has direct consequences for local small-boat operators and excursion-charter markets at ports of call.
- Suites: All-balcony layout, larger footprints
- Dining: 11 venues, new Mediterranean concept (Azure)
- Excursions: Up to 97 included options per voyage
- Entertainment & F&B: Fine wines, gourmet cuisine, varied onboard programs
Inaugural season and itinerary logistics
The inaugural season comprises 13 voyages across the Caribbean and Europe, kicking off with a 14-night transatlantic sailing from Barcelona to Miami on 13 December 2026. Those transoceanic transfers mean heavier bunker needs, complex provisioning stops and specific tender usage at smaller ports where marina berths cannot take large Prestige-Class hulls.
Operational impacts on ports and marinas
When a fleet like Regent’s grows, local port economies feel it quickly. Marinas and marina-side vendors face more demand for short-term yacht and boat rentals, captain hires, and shore excursion partnerships. Smaller operators—think fishing charters or clearwater day trips—often benefit from the flow of passengers seeking private sail or motor-boat experiences while the mothership is in port. As I’ve seen from dockside chatter, captains dust off their checklists and renters polish their Sunseeker listings when a new luxury ship arrives; sometimes it’s a gold rush, sometimes it’s a logistical headache.
What this means for sailing and boat rental markets
Luxury cruise deployments tend to boost ancillary yacht and charter markets in several ways:
- Increased demand for day charters and private tenders at popular stops.
- Opportunities for local captains to offer bespoke activities—snorkeling, fishing, island-hopping.
- Pressure on marinas to provide temporary berthing and provisioning services.
Checklist for local operators
- Review availability for short-term boat rent and charter windows.
- Confirm skippers and captains for peak calls.
- Coordinate transfers for groups tied to included shore excursions.
- Keep inventory for food, water, and fuel to meet increased demand.
Regent’s leadership has framed the order as a long-term investment in ultra-luxury cruising; Jason Montague, Chief Luxury Officer at Regent Seven Seas Cruises, signalled strong confidence in the program’s future. From a practical angle, yard-to-port logistics, crew scheduling and shore-excursion partnerships will be the nuts and bolts that determine whether guests experience seamless indulgence or a series of missed connections.
In short, the fourth Prestige-Class order cements a multi-year production and itinerary plan that touches shipbuilding, marinas and local charter markets alike. For boat owners, yacht brokers and rental operators, expect increased charter interest, higher demand for captains and more collaboration with marinas. Whether you run a small fishing charter or manage a fleet of Sunseeker-style rentals, this expansion will ripple through the gulf of yachting activity—from beach pickups to ocean excursions—highlighting demand for boats, captains and tailored experiences across Destinations, clearwater bays and busy marinas.
Wrap-up: Regent Seven Seas’ fourth Prestige-Class ship, built by Fincantieri with delivery in 2036, follows sister deliveries in 2026, 2030 and 2033. The class emphasises space, all-balcony suites and extensive onboard amenities (including the Skyview Regent Suite and 11 dining venues). Operationally, expect notable effects on provisioning, marinas and local charter markets—more demand for yacht and boat rent, captains, excursions and on-water activities across the Caribbean, Europe and beyond. Whether you’re in yacht sales, a rental operator or a captain, this fleet growth will influence charter patterns, beach and lake activities, fishing trips, and the wider yachting and superyacht economy.


