
July 24
Departure
10
nights
9
ports
$1,710
From
GoCruiseTravel.com Cruise Data
$171
per night
10
nights
68/100
premium with selective inclusions
GoCruiseTravel.com prices this Queen Victoria Italian Riviera & France sailing from $171/night (inside). 10 nights departing July 24, 2026. Compare 4 cabin categories with real pricing data on GoCruiseTravel.com.
Not included
Signature Packages must be purchased at time of booking and cannot be added later. All guests 18+ in the same stateroom must purchase the same package level.
A 15% service charge is automatically added to every beverage purchase made in bars or restaurants. This applies even if you purchase a Signature Package — the package price includes service charges, but a la carte drinks do not.
If you do not adjust the daily service charge while onboard, the payment becomes final and non-refundable. Two passengers in Britannia for a 7-night transatlantic pay ~$238 in gratuities.
As of June 2025, Cunard removed complimentary room service after 10 AM for Britannia cabin guests. Only Princess Grill and Queens Grill suites still receive full complimentary room service.
A 15% service charge is added to all specialty dining bills. A $25 corkage fee applies if you bring your own wine to any restaurant or bar.
Cunard removed complimentary room service after 10 AM for Britannia cabin guests in June 2025. Only breakfast before 10 AM and Grill Suite guests are unaffected.
Cunard enforces a formal dress code on designated Gala evenings. If you don't dress formally, you're restricted to the buffet, some bars, and the casino — main restaurants and many public areas are off-limits.
Cunard's Queen Mary 2 is the only major cruise ship with onboard kennels for dogs and cats, available on Transatlantic crossings only. Kennel prices start at $1,300-$1,500 per voyage and book up quickly.
Cunard Signature Packages (drinks, WiFi, excursion credit) can only be added at time of booking and cannot be purchased later. All adults in the stateroom must buy the same package.
Government-imposed taxes and fees are subject to change, and Cunard reserves the right to collect increases even if the fare has been paid in full.


Day 4
PortofinoItalyOne of Italy's most photogenic harbors: pastel houses reflected in a glassy Ligurian bay.

Day 5
MonacoMonacoThe world's most glamorous small-ship port: Casino Monte-Carlo is a short walk from the pier.
Day 6
ToulonFranceFrance's main naval base offers an authentic, crowd-free Provençal port experience.
Day 7
At Sea

Day 8
AjaccioFranceNapoleon's birthplace: visit his family home and Corsica's mountain-backed capital in one call.

Day 10
At Sea
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Colosseo 2020.jpg)
Rome's 50,000-seat amphitheatre where emperors distracted citizens for 350 years with a spectacle they couldn't unsee. Book tickets online — the same-day queue is a gladiatorial contest in its own right.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; advance booking essential
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Mura vaticane - ingresso ai Musei 00410.JPG)
A labyrinth of papal acquisitions culminating in the Sistine Chapel — Michelangelo spent four years on scaffolding so you'd spend thirty seconds craning your neck. Book online; the walk-up queue is a penance the Church did not design.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–6 pm (last entry 4 pm); closed all Sundays except last Sunday of month
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano September 2015-1a.jpg)
Rome's most famous church, built atop Saint Peter's tomb and scaled to make you feel appropriately small. Entry is free — though the dress code enforcer at the door will turn away bare shoulders without theological debate.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm (summer) / 7 am–6:30 pm (winter); dome climb separately ticketed
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Foro Romano Musei Capitolini Roma.jpg)
The political heart of ancient Rome, now a wide field of columns, arches, and marble worn by two millennia of weather. Same ticket as the Colosseum and Palatine Hill — three ruins for the price of one existential crisis.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Palatine Hill ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palatine Hill.Pavement.jpg)
The hill where Rome's emperors built their palaces, now offering sweeping views over the Forum below and a welcome excuse to sit down. Covered by the same ticket as the Colosseum and Roman Forum.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Roman Forum ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Pantheon (Rome) - Right side and front.jpg)
A Roman temple from 125 AD in unbroken use for nearly 1,900 years — which predates the Christianity that eventually claimed it. Entry now requires a ticket; locals have opinions about this development.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–7 pm, Sun 9 am–6 pm; entry ticket required
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Trevi Fountain - Roma.jpg)
Baroque Rome's most theatrical plumbing: 26 metres of Neptune, sea horses, and cascading water engineered to make you throw a coin and book a return trip. Arrive before 8 am or after 10 pm for photos without strangers in every frame.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Castel_Sant'Angelo_at_Night.jpg)
A mausoleum for emperors turned papal refuge turned prison turned museum — Rome's most over-qualified building. The rooftop has sweeping views of the Tiber and St. Peter's dome, which more than justifies the climb.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9 am–7:30 pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (San Giovanni in Laterano 2021.jpg)
Rome's actual cathedral — not St. Peter's, despite what every tourist assumes — and the oldest public church in Rome still in active use. Free to enter, far fewer crowds than the Vatican, and a nave that makes most European cathedrals feel modest.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore - Roma.jpg)
One of Rome's four great basilicas, with 5th-century mosaics still intact on the triumphal arch — the gift shop outside is a 21st-century addition. Free to enter and reliably less crowded than anything near the Vatican.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry
The second largest church in Rome, largely rebuilt after an 1823 fire — so most of what you see is 19th-century, which in Rome counts as practically new. Free entry; the cloister has a separate ticket and earns it.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Florence Duomo from Michelangelo hill.jpg)
Brunelleschi solved the impossible dome problem in 1436 with a technique he invented and then refused to fully explain. Climbing the 463 steps is optional; the view from the piazza is free and nearly as good.
🕒 Mon–Sat (cathedral nave); dome + bell tower by timed Opera del Duomo ticket
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Florence, Italy - panoramio (125).jpg)
The world's best concentration of Italian Renaissance painting — Botticelli's Birth of Venus, Raphael, Caravaggio — under one roof on the Arno. Book timed-entry tickets weeks ahead or the queue will outlast your port day.
🕒 Tue–Sun 8:15–18:30
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Michelangelo's David - right view 2.jpg)
The marble original is bigger than you expect — nearly 17 feet tall, carved from a block two sculptors had already abandoned. The rest of the museum is modest; David is the only reason anyone actually buys that ticket.
🕒 Tue–Sun 8:15–18:50
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Ponte Vecchio sobre el río Arno, Florencia, Italia, 2022-09-19, DD 02.jpg)
Florence's medieval bridge has been lined with goldsmiths since the 1500s, after the Medici banned butchers for ruining the view — and the smell. Walking it costs nothing; resisting the jewelry shops is the hard part.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Firenze Battistero di San Giovanni Esterno 04.jpg)
Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise — ten gilded bronze panels that took 27 years — are considered the starting pistol of the Renaissance. Note: what's outside are quality casts; the originals moved into the Duomo Museum in the 1990s to stop further weathering.
🕒 Daily; hours vary by season — book via Opera del Duomo
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Piazza della signoria, palazzo vecchio, veduta 01.jpg)
Florence's town hall since 1299, the Piazza della Signoria it anchors is a free open-air sculpture gallery with famous works in situ. Pay to go inside for the Medicean ceiling excess — or just stand in the piazza, which costs nothing.
NaturePhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Jardín de Bóboli, Florencia, Italia, 2022-09-19, DD 12.jpg)
The Medici's 111-acre backyard terraced up the hill behind Palazzo Pitti, with fountains, grottoes, and statues placed wherever the feeling struck. Best visited in the morning before the heat and the tour groups compound each other.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di Santa Croce (12437).jpg)
The Franciscan church that became Florence's pantheon: Michelangelo, Galileo, and Machiavelli are buried here; Dante got a cenotaph (he's in Ravenna, and they're still not over it). The leather school in the cloister sells the real thing.
MuseumPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palazzo Pitti nel tardo pomeriggio.jpg)
The Medicis' main residence from 1549 is now a complex of seven separate museums behind one immense façade — more art per square foot than most cities. Choose your gallery before arriving; trying all seven in a port day is a category error.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Palazzo del bargello visto da piazza san firenze.JPG)
Florence's best sculpture museum occupies a 13th-century fortress that also served as the city prison — Donatello's bronze David, the first freestanding nude since antiquity, has lived here since 1865 when the building became Italy's first national museum. Undervisited by Uffizi standards, which is exactly why you should go.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Santa Maria Novella (Florence).jpg)
Home to Masaccio's Trinity fresco — painted 1427, the first work to use mathematical perspective correctly, still astonishing to stand in front of. Less crowded than Santa Croce and considerably easier to actually see the art.
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Colosseo 2020.jpg)
Rome's 50,000-seat amphitheatre where emperors distracted citizens for 350 years with a spectacle they couldn't unsee. Book tickets online — the same-day queue is a gladiatorial contest in its own right.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; advance booking essential
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Mura vaticane - ingresso ai Musei 00410.JPG)
A labyrinth of papal acquisitions culminating in the Sistine Chapel — Michelangelo spent four years on scaffolding so you'd spend thirty seconds craning your neck. Book online; the walk-up queue is a penance the Church did not design.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–6 pm (last entry 4 pm); closed all Sundays except last Sunday of month
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano September 2015-1a.jpg)
Rome's most famous church, built atop Saint Peter's tomb and scaled to make you feel appropriately small. Entry is free — though the dress code enforcer at the door will turn away bare shoulders without theological debate.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm (summer) / 7 am–6:30 pm (winter); dome climb separately ticketed
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Foro Romano Musei Capitolini Roma.jpg)
The political heart of ancient Rome, now a wide field of columns, arches, and marble worn by two millennia of weather. Same ticket as the Colosseum and Palatine Hill — three ruins for the price of one existential crisis.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Palatine Hill ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Palatine Hill.Pavement.jpg)
The hill where Rome's emperors built their palaces, now offering sweeping views over the Forum below and a welcome excuse to sit down. Covered by the same ticket as the Colosseum and Roman Forum.
🕒 Daily 9 am – approx. 1 hr before sunset; included with Colosseum/Roman Forum ticket
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Pantheon (Rome) - Right side and front.jpg)
A Roman temple from 125 AD in unbroken use for nearly 1,900 years — which predates the Christianity that eventually claimed it. Entry now requires a ticket; locals have opinions about this development.
🕒 Mon–Sat 9 am–7 pm, Sun 9 am–6 pm; entry ticket required
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Trevi Fountain - Roma.jpg)
Baroque Rome's most theatrical plumbing: 26 metres of Neptune, sea horses, and cascading water engineered to make you throw a coin and book a return trip. Arrive before 8 am or after 10 pm for photos without strangers in every frame.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (Castel_Sant'Angelo_at_Night.jpg)
A mausoleum for emperors turned papal refuge turned prison turned museum — Rome's most over-qualified building. The rooftop has sweeping views of the Tiber and St. Peter's dome, which more than justifies the climb.
🕒 Tue–Sun 9 am–7:30 pm
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (San Giovanni in Laterano 2021.jpg)
Rome's actual cathedral — not St. Peter's, despite what every tourist assumes — and the oldest public church in Rome still in active use. Free to enter, far fewer crowds than the Vatican, and a nave that makes most European cathedrals feel modest.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
LandmarkPhoto: Wikimedia Commons (Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore - Roma.jpg)
One of Rome's four great basilicas, with 5th-century mosaics still intact on the triumphal arch — the gift shop outside is a 21st-century addition. Free to enter and reliably less crowded than anything near the Vatican.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry
The second largest church in Rome, largely rebuilt after an 1823 fire — so most of what you see is 19th-century, which in Rome counts as practically new. Free entry; the cloister has a separate ticket and earns it.
🕒 Daily 7 am–7 pm; free entry (cloister separately ticketed)
Before you sail — hotels in Rome
Arrive a day early and explore Rome before boarding
Classic Cunard elegance on an intimate ship. Three-deck Royal Court Theatre, grand Queens Room ballroom, and traditional afternoon tea. Popular for Mediterranean and world voyages. Timeless British luxury.
Typical age
55+
Primary markets
UK · US · AU · DE
Onboard languages
en
Kids onboard
Uncommon — adult-leaning atmosphere