Seven Seas Prestige
Seven Seas Prestige introduces Regent’s first new ship class in a decade, bringing a fresh sense of scale and detail to the line’s ultra-luxury style. With space for 822 guests and an all-suite, all-balcony layout, it feels intimate while still offering plenty to discover. In the heart of Seven Seas Prestige, the Starlight Atrium creates a striking focal point, while Galileo’s Bar adds a polished social hub nearby. Dining also takes a new turn with Azure, a Mediterranean specialty restaurant created exclusively for the ship. Altogether, it promises a refined new chapter for travelers who value comfort, privacy, and beautifully considered surroundings.
Seven Seas Prestige Ship Facts
Class: Prestige Class
Maiden Voyage: December, 2026
Gross Tonnage: 76,550 GT
Length: 224 m / 735 ft
Beam (max): 31.1 m / 102 ft
Guests: 822
Crew: 630
Decks: 12
Signature Features: Prestige Lounge, Meridian Lounge, Constellation Theater, Skyview Suites, La Veranda with Regent’s most expansive al fresco dining area
Itinerary Style: Sailings to the Caribbean, Europe, Panama Canal and Central America, and Transatlantic crossings
sponsored links
Onboard Experience
Accommodation
Accommodation centers on airy suite layouts that prioritize space, privacy, and a residential feel. Serenity Suites introduce built-in minibars, bluish teal accents, and screening elements that separate the bedroom from the living area without closing it off. Concierge Suites add double vanities, furnished verandas, and extra pre-cruise perks that elevate the experience before embarkation. Across the collection, the tone feels polished, quiet, and intentionally spacious rather than overly decorative throughout overall.Dining
Dining aboard Seven Seas Prestige draws on Regent favorites while widening the ship’s culinary range. Compass Rose remains the centerpiece, pairing an elegant setting with a menu that encourages choice and customization rather than fixed formality. Pacific Rim adds a contrasting mood, bringing Asian dishes and striking design to the lineup. Together, these venues create a dining scene that feels varied, carefully paced, and especially appealing on longer luxury voyages.Bars & Lounges
Bars and lounges lean toward quiet conversation instead of high-volume spectacle, giving the ship a more measured social rhythm. An onboard café works well as a daytime meeting point for espresso and lighter breaks between excursions. Later, organized wine tastings shift the mood toward slower, more focused evenings with an educational edge. Seating areas are arranged for comfort and views, helping these spaces feel welcoming without becoming crowded or theatrical.Activities & Entertainment
Activities on Seven Seas Prestige extend well beyond poolside hours, with programming that favors enrichment as much as amusement. Culinary Arts Kitchen brings hands-on cooking sessions led by expert chefs, tying onboard learning to the regions visited along the itinerary. The Enrichment Series adds lectures, classes, and destination-focused insights that give sea days more substance. This approach creates a thoughtful balance between leisure, curiosity, and the pleasures of unhurried travel.Seven Seas Prestige Highlights
The ship’s broader appeal comes from how easily grand public areas connect with quieter corners intended for lingering. A welcoming library offers a calm retreat for reading between ports, while the putting green adds a light outdoor diversion without changing the overall tone. Rather than filling every deck with constant stimulation, the layout leaves room for pause, sea views, and unhurried transitions that suit longer itineraries especially well each day.Regent Cruises Fleet
To explore more ships from Regent Cruises, browse the fleet below and tap a ship name for full details.
Seven Seas Explorer
Seven Seas Grandeur
Seven Seas Mariner
Seven Seas Navigator
Seven Seas Splendor
Seven Seas Voyager
sponsored links
sponsored links
Seven Seas Prestige FAQ
1 Which suite types feel most distinctive on this ship?
The most distinctive options are the two-level Skyview Suites, the Grand Loft Suites with tall window walls, and the Horizon Penthouse Suites with notably larger balconies and open views.
2 What dining venues stand out most for variety?
Azure brings a Mediterranean concept created especially for this ship, while Compass Rose, Pacific Rim, and Prime 7 add different styles for guests who like to alternate settings through the voyage.
3 Is Seven Seas Prestige a good fit for travelers who want roomy suites rather than standard cabins?
Yes. The ship is entirely made up of balcony suites, so even entry-level accommodation starts from a more spacious, private baseline than the cabin mix found on many larger cruise ships.
4 Where would you go for a quieter drink before dinner?
Galileo’s Bar looks especially suited to that role, offering a more intimate setting near the atrium, while the Coffee Connection area can also work well during quieter parts of the day.
5 How strong is the ship for enrichment and sea-day activities?
It looks especially strong in that area because Regent has confirmed a Culinary Arts Kitchen for hands-on classes as well as its Enrichment Series, which adds talks and destination-focused programming.
6 Are there enough outdoor areas besides the main pool?
Yes. In addition to the Pool Deck, the ship includes outdoor spaces tied to suite categories and a putting green, so guests have more than one place to spend time in the open air.
7 What entertainment venue is likely to host the main evening shows?
The Constellation Theater is the clearest answer for headline evening performances, with other lounges and public rooms likely supporting smaller-scale music and social programming elsewhere on board.
8 Does the spa look like a real wellness space or more of a small add-on?
Based on the early material, Seven Seas Prestige appears to have a proper wellness focus, with a dedicated spa area that includes heated loungers, hydrotherapy elements, and a calmer design language overall.
9 What public space seems best for reading or a slower afternoon onboard?
The library looks like the best match for that, especially for guests who want a quieter indoor retreat between ports instead of spending all their free time around the pool.
10 Will first-time luxury cruisers find the layout easy to understand?
Probably yes. With 822 guests, the ship stays relatively intimate, which usually makes it easier to learn where the main restaurants, lounges, and outdoor decks are within the first day or two.