Canada & New England Cruise
Sail past the iconic Statue of Liberty and off on a Canadian and New England adventure onboard the wonderful Norwegian Getaway cruise ship.
What's Included
- Return flights from Dublin to New York
- All transfers from airport / hotel / port
- 1 night in a New York hotel, room only
- 7 nights onboard the 4-star Norwegian Getaway based on two sharing
- Fine dining on a full-board basis
- A variety of day & evening entertainment onboard
- Taxes, charges and 20kg check-in bag per person
Fall in love with the Northeast aboard Norwegian Getaway. Browse Bar Harbor’s many boutique shops, hike to a scenic overlook in famed Acadia National Park or savour a classic New England lobster bake. Then enjoy a narrated excursion through scenic Halifax, past historic sites and along a coastal highway to the picturesque village of Peggy’s Cove. In Canada’s oldest city, St. John’s, you can soak in the best view of the cityscape at Signal Hill National Historic Site or take to the sea on a whale watching or kayaking tour.
Dine on board under the stars along The Waterfront on Norwegian Getaway.
See more of Canada & New England with only one day at sea.
Norwegian Getaway
Norwegian Getaway combines the most magnificent amenities Norwegian has to offer with unforgettable destinations. Stroll The Waterfront, an innovative, industry-first open-air promenade designed to connect guests with the ocean like no other cruise line. Indulge in more than 28 dining options, experience the thrill of five water slides, and three levels of action-packed activities in the sports complex. The excitement and entertainment continues with Broadway musical Million Dollar Quartet. Get ready to explore the white sand beaches and deep-blue waters on a Bahamas or Caribbean cruise, build a pink sandcastle in Bermuda, explore history up close in Europe, or just relax at sea on a Transatlantic cruise. Miami’s Ultimate Ship is your ultimate getaway.
Norwegian Cruise Lines

Agent
Booking Remarks
Prices are per person and based on two sharingInclusive of taxes and service charges as indicated
Non-refundable deposit of €250 per person
Optional Insurance €29 (conditions apply)
Child and family prices available on request
Gratuities on board are not included in the above price
These prices are guidelines only and are subject to change and availability. Pricing will be confirmed at time of booking.
Good to Know
7 night cruise + 1 night in a New York hotel, room onlyItinerary
New York, United States of America.
Following your flight from Dublin, we will transfer you to the hotel for your one night stay in the Big Apple!
The following day you will be transferred to the port to board your ship for your cruise.
Everyone loves New York and there are a million reasons why. Here are but a few: the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, Grand Central Station, the Ellis Island National Monument, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum, Times Square, Broadway, Greenwich Village, 5th Avenue and Central Park.
Newport, Rhode Island
Fascinating as Newport’s early history is, the real intrigue began in the late 1850s when wealthy industrialists began building opulent summer residences along cliff-top Bellevue Ave. Impeccably styled on Italianate palazzi, French châteaux and Elizabethan manor houses, these gloriously restored mansions filled with priceless antiques and their breathtaking location must be seen to be believed. The curiosity, variety, extravagance and uniqueness of this spectacle is unrivalled.
Honouring its maritime roots, Newport remains a global centre for yachting. Put simply, summers here sparkle: locals have excellent taste and know how to throw a shindig. There’s always something going on, including a series of cross-genre festivals that are among the best in the USA.
Portland, Maine
Seagulls scream the smell of beer and fish fry flows through the streets like the fog off Casco Bay, and everywhere the salt wind licks your skin. Maine’s largest city has capitalized on the gifts of its port history – the redbrick warehouse buildings, the narrow cobblestone streets – to become one of the hippest, most vibrant small cities in the Americas. You’ll find excellent museums and galleries, abundant green space, and both a food culture and a brewing scene worthy of a town many times its size.
Set on a peninsula, Portland’s always been a city of the sea. Today, the Old Port district is the town’s historic heart, with handsomely restored brick buildings filled with cafes, shops and bars. There are more hipsters than fishmongers living here these days, but there’s also genuine ethnic diversity – Portland boasts a large African population – generally lacking in the rest of Maine.
Bar Harbor, Maine
Although Bar Harbor’s hustle and bustle is not for everybody, it has by far the most amenities of any town around here. Even if you stay elsewhere, you’ll probably wind up here to eat dinner, grab a drink or schedule a kayaking, sailing or rock-climbing tour.
Bar Harbor’s busiest season is late June through August. There’s a short lull just after Labor Day (early September); it gets busy again during foliage season, which lasts through mid-October. The season ends the weekend following Columbus Day with the Mount Desert Island Marathon
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
The capital of Nova Scotia and the largest city in Canada’s Atlantic Provinces, Halifax was once Great Britain’s major military bastion in North America. The beautifully restored waterfront buildings of Halifax’s Historic Properties recall the city’s centuries-old maritime heritage. Stroll the waterfront, and you may find Nova Scotia’s floating ambassador, the schooner Bluenose II, tied up to Privateer’s Wharf, just as old sailing ships have done for over 200 years. Halifax is also the gateway to Nova Scotia’s stunning scenery, including famous Peggy’s Cove, where surf-pounded granite cliffs and a solitary lighthouse create an unsurpassed scene of rugged natural beauty.
Saint John, New Brunswick (for the Bay of Fundy), Canada
Saint John, Canada’s oldest settlement is the gateway to the scenic wonders of New Brunswick. One of Canada’s oldest provinces, New Brunswick remains remarkably unspoiled: 85 percent of the province remains unsettled. New Brunswick boasts vast forests, purling streams, gentle hills, rich farmlands, and a spectacular coastline dotted by historic towns. Nature also blessed the area with one of her most astonishing phenomena: the reversing River Rapids. The fierce tides of the Bay of Fundy rise with such force that they actually cause the St. John River to reverse direction and its waters to flow upstream. Saint John’s history dates to 1604, when the Sieur de Champlain landed nearby on the feast day of Saint John the Baptist. After the American Revolution, American Loyalists flocked to the area. Saint John became a thriving industrial port. But the catastrophic fire of 1877, declining commerce and decades of neglect gave the town a sad and careworn look for decades. That changed in recent years. Redevelopment of the waterfront and the old district has restored Saint John’s charm and its sense of history.
At Sea
New York, United States of America.
Your cruise comes to an end as you sail past the Statue of Liberty and into New York harbour. Following disembarkation, you will be transferred to the airport for your flight to Ireland.