For the first time, Carnival Cruise Line is bringing double the fun to the Port of Baltimore. The cruise line is adding a second ship in Baltimore for the 2027/28 season–Carnival Miracle. She will join her sister ship, Carnival Pride, which will continue to sail year-round from the port. Together they will offer more Caribbean itineraries throughout the season.
“Baltimore has been an important homeport for Carnival for more than two decades, and we’re excited to continue building on our year-round operations with the addition of Carnival Miracle,” said Christine Duffy, president of Carnival Cruise Line. “By giving our guests more variety in itineraries and ships, we’re giving them more reasons to take a Carnival Cruise vacation.”
Beginning fall 2027, the Spirit-class ship will sail 7- to 9-night voyages to the Bahamas and Eastern Caribbean. Carnival Miracle will also offer extended 12- and 14-day Carnival Journeys sailings that will explore highly sought after ports like Dominica, Guadeloupe, St. Maarten, and more. Guests can expect Carnival Miracle to arrive in Baltimore on November 20, 2027, following her transatlantic voyage from Civitavecchia, Italy.
Carnival Pride will continue to sail 7-day Bahamas itineraries, 7-day Bermuda sailings, and 9-, 12-, and 14-day Carnival voyages. Her destinations will include Aruba, Curaçao, Barbados, St. Lucia, St. Kitts, Antigua, Tortola and Martinique.
Carnival Cruise Line also announced the Vista-class Carnival Firenze will leave California in early 2027 to reposition to the East Coast by way of South America. She will sail the first part of the year from PortMiami, and then spend the summer sailing from New York. Beginning fall 2027, Carnival Firenze will sail from Port Canaveral. She will offer various 4- to 14-day Caribbean sailings. Itineraries will include short Bahamas voyages featuring Celebration Key, longer voyages throughout the Eastern Caribbean, and Carnival Journeys sailings to the Southern Caribbean.
If you would like to know more about Carnival Cruise Line’s Spirit-class ships, click here, and for more information about Vista-class ships, click here.
