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Exclusive savings of $3,600 per stateroom
Twenty-nine nights tracing the Pacific edge of two continents, from the mountains of British Columbia to the vineyards at the foot of the Andes. Your journey begins with a night in Vancouver before Nieuw Amsterdam carries you south through California, Central America and across the equator into South America. Two nights in Lima put you within reach of Machu Picchu and some of the finest food on the planet. The voyage ends in Santiago, two nights to explore a city caught between colonial grandeur and modern energy.
Fourteen countries of coastline. One continuous journey.
INCLUDED IN YOUR PACKAGE
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Exclusive savings of $3,600 per stateroom
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Private transfer from airport to hotel
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1 night, 4 star hotel accommodation in Vancouver
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26 night cruise on Nieuw Amsterdam, Vancouver to San Antonio (Santiago)
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All meals and entertainment onboard
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Port charges and government fees onboard
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Private transfer from port to hotel
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2 night, 4 star hotel accommodation in Santiago
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Private transfer from hotel to airport
YOUR ITINERARY
A city that earns its reputation without trying hard. Vancouver sits where the Pacific meets the mountains, and the tension between the two gives it its character; a working waterfront, world-class dining, neighbourhoods that shift in feel within a few blocks. Use the day to find your bearings: Stanley Park, Granville Island, a meal somewhere you’d never normally find. The ship departs tonight.
...Once a trading post and a rough-and-tumble sawmilling settlement, today modern Vancouver, Canada is many things. Cruise to Vancouver and visit this bustling seaport. This city is a hub for outdoor enthusiasts looking for active things to do in Vancouver an ethnically diverse metropolis, and Hollywood of the North. Hemmed in by mountains and sea, Vancouver seduces visitors with its combination of urban sophistication and laid-back attitude against a backdrop of glass towers and modern sights and plentiful green spaces.
Enjoy enjoy local attractions, fun filled outdoor activities, and an innovative culinary scene on a Vancouver cruise excursion. Vancouver’s culinary and cocktail scene is on the rise—and its excellent restaurants and hopping bars have a distinctively local stamp on them. If you are looking for where to go in Vancouver for music, theater and the arts, they are thriving in the city’s many museums, galleries and performance venues. Beyond the downtown attractions in Vancouver, days of exploration and sightseeing await among the colorful suburbs, unspoiled islands and the vast, rugged wilderness.
...With cable cars that “climb halfway to the stars,” this is everybody’s favorite city by the bay. Alcatraz, Nob Hill, Lombard Street, Fisherman’s Wharf of course you’ve heard of them all. Don’t miss this chance to really experience San Francisco.
...Easygoing San Diego embodies the Southern California surfer town fantasy, with its more than 300 days of sun, mild year-round temperatures and accessible, sporty pastimes and tourist attractions. Cruise to San Diego and hike the Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve to get a glimpse of whale migrations, go sailing in the bay and, of course, surf the famous swells of Del Mar, Oceanside and La Jolla (among many other superb spots). Cruise from San Diego and explore the sixth-largest city in the United States. Discover San Diego’s distinctive neighborhoods on a San Diego shore excursion. Visit Old Town, North Park, Point Loma and Coronado are all within a few miles of the port, while the bustling Gaslamp Quarter and Little Italy are within walking distance.
And while there are lots of things to do for everyone on a San Diego Cruise—from visiting the country’s largest urban park to taking in the famous horse-racing season in Del Mar to riding the charming Old Town Trolley—definitely don’t pass up the chance to investigate San Diego’s quickly growing reputation as a culinary destination. Its inventive new restaurants and huge craft-brewing industry are something to be explored.
...Los Cabos doesn’t exude the same kind of charm as many other areas of inland Mexico do, but its twin towns—San José del Cabo and Cabo San Lucas—don’t seem to mind, and neither do visitors who take a cruise to Cabo, who are more or less drawn here less for traditional Mexican culture than for the sun, the sand and the opportunity to just slow down and relax. Los Cabos—or the Capes—sits at the southernmost tip of the Baja California Peninsula, a narrow strip of land whose varied geography, both above and underwater, makes for plenty of interesting activities and some unusual ones, too. Did you ever think you’d ride a camel in Mexico? You can do that here, or enjoy more predictable pursuits including fishing, golfing and whale-watching. Want something still more laid-back? On your Cabo cruise you can visit picture-perfect El Arco, an arch that may look familiar thanks to its cameo on postcards and tourism advertisements. North of the capes, you can drop by the famed Hotel California. And if you’ve worked up an appetite on your Cabo cruise, you won’t be disappointed: Los Cabos offers plenty to enjoy at the table as well, with farm-fresh fruits and vegetables and, of course, seafood being the mainstays here. Regardless, Holland America Line makes sure that our Cabo cruises have plenty of new and traditional things for our guest to enjoy and experience.
...Everything you ever wanted in a seaside resort: warm sun, sandy beaches and nine beautiful bays rimmed in every shade of blue. Nearby: low-growth caducifolia jungles teeming with birdlife and the nesting grounds of endangered sea turtles. Sample shore excursions: Five Bays by Catamaran; Horseback Riding; Bird-watching Eco Tour; ATV Jungle Adventure.
...In the cultured little country of Guatemala modern Maya still weave their stories on backstrap looms, and the great stone temples of Tikal stand in silent testament to ancient Mayan ingenuity. Sample shore excursions: Casa Santa Domingo & Antigua; Lake Atitlan & Highlands; Finca Coffee Plantation Tour; Tikal Expedition by Air.
...Yet another chance to witness the wonders of eco-rich Costa Rica. Or tour to Sarchi, where the painting of oxcarts has evolved to high art.
...Just outside this tranquil coast town lie the villages where the famous Panama hats are woven. Farther afield: colonial Quito, so perfectly preserved the entire Old Town has been designated a World Heritage Site. Sample shore excursions: A Day in Quito; Manta & Montecristi.
...Just outside this tranquil coast town lie the villages where the famous Panama hats are woven. Farther afield: colonial Quito, so perfectly preserved the entire Old Town has been designated a World Heritage Site. Sample shore excursions: A Day in Quito; Manta & Montecristi.
...To the north is the “Lordiest City” of Trujillo, founded in 1535 and still rich in ornate colonial detail. At its edge, far older and long abandoned by the Chimu Indians, sits the eerie adobe metropolis of Chan Chan. Sample shore excursions: Trujillo and the Temples; Ch n Ch n Citadel/Dragon Huaca/Totora Caballitos.
...Peru’s bone-dry capital (only Cairo is drier as far as national capitals go), Lima is a booming energetic metropolis built on ancient foundations millennia in the making. At first she is no looker, but scratch that parched surface below the high-rise offices and dust-settled dwellings and Lima’s charms begin to shine: Strikingly preserved pre-Columbian ruins sit defiantly among modern skyscrapers, a cultural potpourri of world-class museums, sun-toasted beaches beautifully illuminated by nightly sunsets and one of the most exciting and dynamic culinary landscapes in the world.
Lima is a tale of two cities. Colonial charms abound in the city’s historic center, where impressive plazas—including the cinematic 16th-century Plaza de Armas, the handiwork of Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro—are overseen by Baroque and neoclassical cathedrals, palaces, monasteries and remnants of ancient city walls. But a different Lima emerges in the cliff-hugging seaside barrios of Miraflores and Barranco. Miraflores, Lima’s modern face, is a bustling enclave of chic restaurants, bars and nightlife, and Barranco is a bohemian resort commune flush with grand casonas converted into atmospheric hotels and eateries. One of the city’s allures is navigating between the old and the new.
But the Peruvian capital is at its most extraordinary at mealtimes, where the signature dishes of its world-famous cuisine—ceviche, lomo saltado pisco (beef stir-fried with tomatoes, peppers, onions and fried potatoes), aji de gallina (a pepper-laced chicken stew), causa (avocado and shrimp layered between mashed potato)—are the culinary stuff of legend, further wowing when chased by Peru’s extraordinary national cocktail, the highly addictive pisco sour. ¡Salud!
...Peru’s bone-dry capital (only Cairo is drier as far as national capitals go), Lima is a booming energetic metropolis built on ancient foundations millennia in the making. At first she is no looker, but scratch that parched surface below the high-rise offices and dust-settled dwellings and Lima’s charms begin to shine: Strikingly preserved pre-Columbian ruins sit defiantly among modern skyscrapers, a cultural potpourri of world-class museums, sun-toasted beaches beautifully illuminated by nightly sunsets and one of the most exciting and dynamic culinary landscapes in the world.
Lima is a tale of two cities. Colonial charms abound in the city’s historic center, where impressive plazas—including the cinematic 16th-century Plaza de Armas, the handiwork of Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro—are overseen by Baroque and neoclassical cathedrals, palaces, monasteries and remnants of ancient city walls. But a different Lima emerges in the cliff-hugging seaside barrios of Miraflores and Barranco. Miraflores, Lima’s modern face, is a bustling enclave of chic restaurants, bars and nightlife, and Barranco is a bohemian resort commune flush with grand casonas converted into atmospheric hotels and eateries. One of the city’s allures is navigating between the old and the new.
But the Peruvian capital is at its most extraordinary at mealtimes, where the signature dishes of its world-famous cuisine—ceviche, lomo saltado pisco (beef stir-fried with tomatoes, peppers, onions and fried potatoes), aji de gallina (a pepper-laced chicken stew), causa (avocado and shrimp layered between mashed potato)—are the culinary stuff of legend, further wowing when chased by Peru’s extraordinary national cocktail, the highly addictive pisco sour. ¡Salud!
...General San Martin was named for José de San Martín who, nearly 200 years ago, liberated Peru from Spanish rule. This thriving harbor is your gateway to the Nazca Lines geoglyphs, the ancient spires of Macchu Picchu, and the port of Pisco. Visit the Paracas National Reserve, a refuge for seals, penguins, flamingos and more. Sample shore excursions: Ballestas Island Wildlife Sanctuary Cruise; The Route of Pisco; Tambo Colorado & Paracas Museum.
...Chile’s northernmost city, Arica, is characteristically arid for the region, which is home to the world’s driest desert, the Atacama. The climate and terrain may not seem hospitable for long-term living, but for a visitor just passing through, they’re critical: These were the conditions that created the attractions that bring travelers here. Those attractions include a fascinating archaeological museum that claims to have the world’s oldest mummies, and a village that dates to the pre-Hispanic era and retains some of its mystical allure. There’s also a cathedral featuring a door that came straight from Eiffel’s Parisian workshop (yes, that Eiffel) and a local wine called Pintatani made from grapes that grow in an unusually fertile part of Arica. Fresh seafood straight from the Pacific Coast is the highlight of most menus in Arica, and it plays a starring role in displays at the local markets as well, where picture taking and people-watching are two ideal ways to while away a morning or afternoon.
...Coquimbo may be relatively small for a capital city (it’s the seat of the Chilean province Elqui), but between its location along the Pan-American Highway and its status as an important port, Coquimbo receives quite a few domestic and international visitors. Many of them use the city as a jumping-off point from which to explore the attractions of the surrounding Elqui Valley. Reached by the Ruta de Estrellas (Route of the Stars), the valley’s vineyards yield to a desert landscape that is home to approximately 70 percent of the world’s astronomical observational infrastructure, including nearly a dozen observatories. Other popular out-of-town destinations include southern beach towns like Guanaqueros and Tongoy. Don’t rush beyond city limits without checking out Coquimbo’s own sights, though; because of its mining and port history, there’s been a fair bit of global influence on local life and culture. One place where this influence is evident is the Coquimbo Mosque; while it’s a recently built structure, inaugurated in 2007, it’s still a testament to the long and fascinating history of this Chilean coastal town.
...This large, modern port serves Chile’s capital, Santiago, a city with Spanish colonial charm and a vivacious spirit. Encircled by the Andes and the Coastal Range, Santiago is centered around the Plaza de Armas, with several of the city’s landmarks: the 18th-century Metropolitan Cathedral the Palacio de la Real Audencia from 1808, the City Hall and the National Museum of History. North of San Antonio lie the picturesque old port and university town of Valparaíso and the colorful seaside resort of Viña del Mar. In between the coast and the capital are valleys filled with some of Chile’s most famous wineries, all inviting you to come and taste.
...Chile’s capital rewards the curious. The historic centre around Plaza de Armas holds centuries of architecture in a compact space, while the hillside barrios of Bellavista and Lastarria offer galleries, wine bars and restaurants that have made Santiago one of South America’s most interesting cities to eat in. Day trips reach the Casablanca and Maipo valleys, two of Chile’s most respected wine regions, both within an hour. Two nights gives you time to move at your own pace.
...Today you disembark your Inca Coast cruise stay holiday comes to a close.
...YOUR SHIP - The Nieuw Amsterdam
The second of Holland America’s Signature Class ships, Nieuw Amsterdam, celebrates historic New York City with an inspired design and art collection. While on board, rejuvenate in the tranquil Spa & Salon, play pickleball at sea, or enjoy a tantalizing meal at fine dining restaurants. When you’re in the mood for music, Billboard Onboard fills the room with chart-topping hits.
Crow’s Nest
Explorers Lounge
Neptune Lounge
Panorama Lounge
Photo Gallery
Show Lounges
Basketball
Fitness Center
Pickleball
Digital Workshop
Internet Cafe
Club HAL
Library
The Loft
Asian Restaurant
Atrium Bar
Cabanas
Canaletto Restaurant
Explorations Cafe
Italian Restaurant
Kitchen
Lido Bar
Lido Casual Restaurant
Main Dining Room
Manhattan
Piano Bar
Pinnacle Grill
Seafood Shack
Sports Bar
Tamarind Restaurant and Silk Den Lounge
Terrace Grill
The Verandah
Veranda
Art Gallery
Atrium
Boutique
Concierge
Culinary Arts Center
Observation Deck
Shops
Facial Treatments
Greenhouse Spa & Salon
Hot Stone Therapy
Hydro Massage Pool
Lido Pool
Sauna
Spa
Steam Room
The Retreat
Thermal Suite
Whirlpool
Description
The second of Holland America’s Signature Class ships, Nieuw Amsterdam, celebrates historic New York City with an inspired design and art collection. While on board, rejuvenate in the tranquil Spa & Salon, play pickleball at sea, or enjoy a tantalizing meal at fine dining restaurants. When you’re in the mood for music, Billboard Onboard fills the room with chart-topping hits.
Entertainment
Crow’s Nest
Explorers Lounge
Neptune Lounge
Panorama Lounge
Photo Gallery
Show Lounges
Fitness
Basketball
Fitness Center
Pickleball
Technology
Digital Workshop
Internet Cafe
Recreational
Club HAL
Library
The Loft
Food and Drink
Asian Restaurant
Atrium Bar
Cabanas
Canaletto Restaurant
Explorations Cafe
Italian Restaurant
Kitchen
Lido Bar
Lido Casual Restaurant
Main Dining Room
Manhattan
Piano Bar
Pinnacle Grill
Seafood Shack
Sports Bar
Tamarind Restaurant and Silk Den Lounge
Terrace Grill
The Verandah
Veranda
Other
Art Gallery
Atrium
Boutique
Concierge
Culinary Arts Center
Observation Deck
Shops
Relaxation
Facial Treatments
Greenhouse Spa & Salon
Hot Stone Therapy
Hydro Massage Pool
Lido Pool
Sauna
Spa
Steam Room
The Retreat
Thermal Suite
Whirlpool
Launched
2010
Tonnage
86,700
Length
936
Capacity
2,106
AVAILABLE STATEROOMS
Click the tabs to view the different staterooms with their category
Standard Interior Stateroom-[N]
Large Ocean view Stateroom (Partial Sea View)-[G]
Verandah Stateroom-[VH]
Signature Suite-[SZ]
Inside from $4,999*
Large Interior Stateroom-[I]
Interior Spa Stateroom-[IQ]
Large/Standard Inside Stateroom-[J]
Large/Standard Inside Stateroom-[K]
Standard Interior Stateroom-[L]
Standard Interior Stateroom-[M]
Standard Interior Stateroom-[MM]
Standard Interior Stateroom-[N]
Outside from $5,599*
Large Ocean view Stateroom-[C]
Large Ocean view Spa Stateroom-[CQ]
Large Ocean view Stateroom-[D]
Large Ocean view Stateroom-[DD]
Large Ocean view Stateroom-[E]
Large Ocean view Stateroom-[F]
Large Ocean view Stateroom (Partial Sea View)-[G]
Large Ocean view Stateroom (Fully Obstructed View)-[H]
Large Ocean view Stateroom (Fully Obstructed View)-[HH]
Balcony from $7,299*
Verandah Stateroom-[V]
Verandah Stateroom-[VA]
Verandah Stateroom-[VB]
Verandah Stateroom-[VC]
Verandah Stateroom-[VD]
Verandah Stateroom-[VE]
Verandah Stateroom-[VF]
Verandah Stateroom-[VH]
Verandah Spa Stateroom-[VQ]
Suite from $10,699*
Pinnacle Suite-[PS]
Neptune Suite-[SA]
Neptune Suite-[SB]
Neptune Suite-[SC]
Neptune Spa Suite-[SQ]
Signature Suite-[SS]
Signature Suite-[SY]
Signature Suite-[SZ]
Important Notice
The following product terms and conditions apply in addition to our Booking Terms and Conditions (available on our website) and terms and conditions of the relevant travel service provider. Prices quoted are valid for sale until 30 Jun 2026 for travel during the period specified (if applicable) unless otherwise stated or sold out prior. All prices are per person, twin share (unless otherwise stated), subject to availability and may be withdrawn or varied without notice. All savings are included in the advertised price. Some categories may have obstructed views. Airfare (including internal flights) is not included unless otherwise stated and, if included, is economy class unless otherwise stated. Airfares require full payment in order to ticket. Airfares if included are based on specific dates and routings. Flights may be altered up to the package value which your Cruise Travel Advisor will be able to advise. Components of the total price including local payments, “resort fees”, “national park fees”, “trip kitties” and food funds (if applicable) may be payable direct to the supplier on arrival or to your travel consultant prior to your departure. Where applicable, these payments are included in the total price quoted. Onboard spending money is not included unless otherwise stated. If included it is per stateroom unless stated otherwise, is non-transferable, non-refundable and has no cash value. Onboard spending money/credit may not be used in the medical centre or casino and expires at the end of the cruise. Gratuities are not included unless otherwise stated. Prices shown are fully inclusive of taxes, levies and government charges current at the time of publication. Additional supplier conditions and travel restrictions may apply. Prices shown are for payments made by cash in store or by BPAY. Payments made in store by credit card will incur a surcharge (see Booking Terms and Conditions for further details). Prices quoted are accurate as of 25 MAY 2026 and may be higher depending on date of purchase and date of travel. Cruiseabout cannot guarantee that any particular product will still be available at the following prices, or for your exact dates of travel. At the time of making your booking, prices may differ to the price displayed on the website. Please contact your Cruiseabout Travel Advisor to obtain the latest up to date information regarding applicable prices, fees and charges, taxes, availability, blackout dates (such as school holidays), seasonal surcharges and other terms and conditions which may apply. View our full Terms and Conditions. (HAL243)