Five essential things you should know before you board a P&O Cruises ship
Everything you need to know about P&O Cruises, where every cabin has Twining’s tea and you’ll always find a decent pint
![P&O Cruises' Conservatory Mini Suite cabin](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/travel/2024/07/11/TELEMMGLPICT000303994327_17207172560490_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqZgEkZX3M936N5BQK4Va8RWtT0gK_6EfZT336f62EI5U.jpeg?imwidth=350)
Jump to content
Everything you need to know about P&O Cruises, where every cabin has Twining’s tea and you’ll always find a decent pint
Royal Caribbean’s latest and biggest ship has armies of staff, seven pools and 20 decks of fun
I'd never considered myself a 'cruise person' – but touring the Caribbean on the Royal Clipper changed my mind
Whether it’s fully accessible cabins, specialist equipment or inclusive excursions, these cruise lines have it covered
At times outpaced by seabirds and passing dolphins, our writer relishes a languid life at sea en route from Costa Rica to the Panama Canal
One enthusiast spends 50 weeks a year on a ship; others have clocked up 200 voyages. But why do they enjoy life afloat so much?
Five times the size of Titanic, Icon of the Seas is only the beginning of the mega-ship era
We look inside Royal Caribbean’s half-finished Icon of the Seas – and find a floating city which might yet silence its critics
Long considered to produce the world's finest cacao beans, this quaint Caribbean bolthole is a chocoholic's dream
Must I still take a Covid test? Where can I sail to from the UK? Will everyone be old? We answer all the burning questions
After 100 years, the luxury of taking a long, languid voyage around the globe is still going strong – and there are more options than ever
From classic routes to offbeat itineraries and the best lines to book with, here's our expert guide to holidays on the water