Spain, Canary Islands, Antilles, Dominican Republic

Costa Fascinosa: BCN - LRM - BCN14A4R

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1 available date

06.12. - 20.12.
From
854,00€
per cabin

Itinerary

From854,00 €/per cabin
The displayed price includes the cruise fare and port fees.
Total cruise price for:
2 adults
From854,00 €/per cabin
The displayed price includes the cruise fare and port fees.
Package price includes
Cabin: IN1
Service type: Travelag
Dates
06.12.2026.
20.12.2026.
1. Day
Barcelona, Spain
Sun. 06.12.2026.
Departure: 20:00
2. Day
Malaga (Granada), Spain
Tue. 08.12.2026.
07:00 - 14:00
3. Day
Las Palmas de G.Canaria (Canary Is.), Spain
Thu. 10.12.2026.
10:00 - 19:00
4. Day
Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe
Thu. 17.12.2026.
09:00 - 19:00
5. Day
St. Maarten
Fri. 18.12.2026.
08:00 - 18:00
6. Day
La Romana, Dominican Republic
Sun. 20.12.2026.
Arrival: 08:00
Day 1

Barcelona, Spain

Sun. 06.12.2026.
Departure: 20:00

Barcelona, the capital of Catalonia, is a city with a rich and diverse history that dates back to the Roman era. Over the centuries, it was under Roman, Arab, Byzantine, and Christian rule, all of which have left a lasting mark on its architecture and cultural identity. During the Middle Ages, Barcelona became an important commercial and cultural center of Catalonia, and in the 19th century, it experienced significant industrial and urban development.

One of the most notable architects associated with Barcelona was Antoni Gaudí, whose works such as the Sagrada Família, Park Güell, Casa Batlló, and Casa Milà have become iconic symbols of the city. His unique style, which blends elements of Gothic, Modernism, and natural forms, has made Barcelona a uniquely vibrant urban space. Among the city’s most famous attractions are La Rambla, a lively promenade stretching from Plaça de Catalunya to the sea, and the Gothic Quarter (Barri Gòtic), the old part of the city filled with medieval alleys, buildings, and churches, including the Cathedral of Saint Eulalia. The artistic spirit of the city can also be felt in the Picasso Museum and the Joan Miró Foundation, which house works by two of Catalonia’s greatest artists.

Barcelona is also renowned for its famous football club, FC Barcelona, whose stadium Camp Nou attracts thousands of visitors eager to experience the passion and pride that Catalans have for their team.

The city also offers a rich culinary scene – from its famous tapas to traditional dishes such as paella, fideuà, zarzuela, and the dessert crema catalana. A highlight is the Boqueria Market, where visitors can taste local products and delicacies. Today, Barcelona is one of the most visited cities in Europe, offering a perfect blend of history, art, architecture, sport, gastronomy, and Mediterranean spirit.

Day 2

Malaga (Granada), Spain

Tue. 08.12.2026.
07:00 - 14:00

Malaga is one of the oldest cities in Europe, with a history spanning over 2,800 years. The city was founded by the Phoenicians around 770 BC, and was later ruled by the Romans, Visigoths, and Moors, each leaving behind a rich architectural and cultural legacy. Some of the most notable landmarks are the Roman Theatre, the Moorish Alcazaba fortress, which offers a stunning view over Malaga and the coast, and numerous museums. The most notable ones include the Picasso Museum, the Carmen Thyssen Museum, and the La Manquita Cathedral.

The city is also known as the birthplace of Pablo Picasso, one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, and is home to La Concepción, one of the most significant botanical gardens in Europe and the modern Muelle Uno promenade.

Malaga offers beautiful beaches, such as Playa de la Malagueta, close to the city center, and Playa del Palo, as well as a rich gastronomic scene focused on fresh local ingredients. Specialties include espeto (grilled sardines), gazpacho (cold tomato soup), a wide variety of tapas, and sweet wines like Moscatel. The Atarazanas Market is the perfect place to sample local food and buy souvenirs.

Day 3

Las Palmas de G.Canaria (Canary Is.), Spain

Thu. 10.12.2026.
10:00 - 19:00

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, the largest city in the Canary Islands, is located on the northeastern coast of the island of Gran Canaria. This vibrant city combines a rich history, a cosmopolitan atmosphere, and a relaxed Mediterranean-Atlantic lifestyle. The historic heart of the city, Vegueta, is the perfect place to explore colonial architecture and cultural heritage. Its cobbled streets are home to important museums, churches, and buildings from the 15th and 16th centuries, including the House of Christopher Columbus. In contrast, the modern parts of the city offer a wide range of shops, restaurants, galleries, and the dynamic rhythm of urban life.

One of the city’s main attractions is Las Canteras Beach, over three kilometres long and located right in the city centre. Thanks to a natural reef that softens the waves, it's ideal for swimming, snorkelling, and seaside walks. The city hosts numerous cultural events throughout the year, including the well-known carnival, famous for its costumes, parades, and music. The cultural scene is enriched with theatres, concert halls, and museums.

The local cuisine features traditional Canarian flavours – fresh fish dishes, local vegetables, papas arrugadas with mojo sauce – along with influences from Latin America and Africa, reflecting the city’s historical ties to trade and the sea.

Thanks to its mild year-round climate and excellent transport connections, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is an ideal destination for those looking to combine culture, the sea, nature, and urban life all in one place.

Day 4

Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe

Thu. 17.12.2026.
09:00 - 19:00

     The beautiful island of Guadeloupe is part of the French Antilles and is geologically two islands joined together, Grande Terre and Basse Terre. Point a Pitre is on Grande Terre and is Guadeloupe's largest commercial centre. When Christopher Columbus landed on the southern coast of Basse Terre in 1493 he baptised the beach Santa Maria, and the island Santa Maria de Guadeloupe de Estremadura, subsequently changed to Guadeloupe.
     First Spanish settlers, and then French, developed sugar cane production on the islands, which also became centres of the slave trade. Eventually, with the initial help of French revolutionary Victor Hugues and later Victor Schoelcher, the slaves of Guadeloupe were freed. The island is still French territory, administered by a governor appointed by the Paris Ministry of the Interior. The two halves of Guadeloupe are quite different in character.
     Grande Terre has a gentler landscape, but is the more lively side, with Pointe a Pitre market, narrow alleyways, picturesque villages and large sugar cane plantations. Basse Terre is more lush and mountainous. It also has one of the Caribbean's few national parks, complete with rivers, rainforest and the dominating presence of the 1,467-metre high Soufrière volcano. The hot springs of Soufrière Park are masterpieces of nature. Both sides of the island have some excellent beaches.
     The lifestyle of Guadeloupe is simple and relaxed. A substantial number of the island's villagers still barter for their goods and services rather than use money. And although tourism has flourished, the local economy is still largely based on agriculture. Island attractions include a museum dedicated to local poet, St. John Perse, awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1960, the Schoelcher Museum, dedicated to the slavery abolitionist, and the beach resort of Gosier, one of the most bustling tourist centres in the Lesser Antilles.

Day 5

St. Maarten

Fri. 18.12.2026.
08:00 - 18:00

     In 1493, when Christopher Columbus first set foot on the white sand beaches of St Maarten, he declared: 'I was looking for the Indies and I found the Garden of Eden'. Named after a priest who lived on the island from 330AD-397AD, St Maarten has been historically influenced by the Dutch, English, French and Spanish.
     Today the island is shared by the Dutch in the south, who call it Sint Marteen and the French in the north, who refer to it as St Martin de Tours. But the first people to leave their mark on the island were Arawak Indians who were skilled farmers and developed a thriving community on St Maarten. In the 17th Century, the existence of salt pans soon attracted the attentions of the Spanish, later displaced by the Dutch and the French. The initial agreement between the Dutch and French to share the tiny island dates back to 1648, although it was broken many times and there were frequent skirmishes between the two sides, at times with British involvement.
     The Caribbean curse - piracy - befell St Maarten for some 150 years and stories still persist of as yet undiscovered treasure buried on the island or sunk with galleons. The more notorious pirates and buccaneers included John Hawkins, Francis Drake, Henry Morgan and William Dampier. The border between the Dutch and French sides of the island is marked by a monument between Union Road and Bellevue. Each side of the island has splendid beaches and the crystal clear waters offer excellent bathing and numerous watersports. The tiny port of Philipsburg extends along a sandbank between the sea and a reclaimed salt pond.

Day 6

La Romana, Dominican Republic

Sun. 20.12.2026.
Arrival: 08:00

     Although they are relatively new destinations for tourists from Europe and the United States alike, the Dominican Republic and La Romana, a city on the island's beautiful eastern coast, have been attracting visitors for many centuries.
     Their vocation is the legacy of what anthropologists have identified as the island's earliest settlers. The Taino Indians are thought by historians to have been a friendly, peace-loving race who farmed the land and lived quietly and simply in harmony both with nature and their fellow men.
     Extensive historical evidence of the Taino people has been painstakingly collected and can now be seen in the country's two main museums in Santo Domingo and Puerto Plata. Historians who have studied the island's social and cultural development believe that the Dominican Republic had a highly complex structure. So much so, in fact, that Santo Domingo and La Romana (which was once much smaller than it is today) were once considered the only two cities on the entire continent.
     Fact or fiction, legend or history... what is certain is that Taino farmers had their own manuals for farming and fishing, and led highly active lives with plenty of religious activities as well as work. Evidence of this has been passed down through inscriptions and various artefacts, most of them made from the ceramics at which the ancient people of the Dominican Republic excelled.
     The first hint of revolution arrived of course with Christopher Columbus's first voyage. The explorer landed in the bay on 5th December 1492. He founded a small village, setting in motion a process of colonisation which soon led the island and its various activities to grow beyond measure.
     La Romana emerged as a city of traders and seafarers. Its port became a flourishing cultural hub thanks to its close linguistic ties to the nearby coasts: art and music did the rest. Santo Domingo and La Romana have always been a focal point for trade, wellbeing and entertainment, although they have only been recognised as such universally in the past few decades.
     La Romana is not only a thriving, bustling port: it is a beautiful city which boasts all the positive aspects of sea trade. La Romana lies towards the eastern area of the island: with the town of Punta Cana it is the key focus of culture and tourism along the entire coastline. La Romana is also known for its vicinity to San Pedro de Macorìs. Americans are more than familiar with this small village which nestles among sugar cane plantations: it has been feeding the US professional baseball league with natural-born talent for many years.
     Near to La Romana lie some of the most stunning beaches on the American continent, including Bayahibe and Dominicus. A short hop from La Romana and the coast, the Saona and Catalina islands have also become enormously popular tourist destinations in recent years. These paradise islands are the ideal location for lovers of the sea at its most unspoilt. Here the beaches stretch for kilometres, and swathes of white sand are lapped by the turquoise waters. It is the perfect setting for a number of beautiful nature reserves, foremost of which is the Parque Nacional del Este, or Eastern National Park. The Park is considered an international heritage site and covers an area of over 420 square kilometres.
     Saona Island and the village of Bayahibe lie within the park. In this setting, La Romana is shaking off its image as a port and emerging as the capital of a booming tourist trade. Every year thousands of tourists flock to its beaches, seeking their own corner of paradise where they can forget the stresses and strains of daily life, at least for a few days.

Available cabins for Sun. 06.12. - Sun. 20.12.2026.

The Interior (IN1)
The Interior (IN1)
854,00 € / per cabin
1.560,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Travelag
The Interior (IN2)
The Interior (IN2)
870,00 € / per cabin
1.620,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Travelag
Sea View (ET1)
Sea View (ET1)
974,00 € / per cabin
1.840,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Travelag
Sea Balcony (BA1)
Sea Balcony (BA1)
1.064,00 € / per cabin
2.060,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Travelag
Sea Balcony (BA2)
Sea Balcony (BA2)
1.092,00 € / per cabin
2.140,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Travelag
The Interior (I1)
The Interior (I1)
1.678,00 € / per cabin
2.288,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
The Interior (I2)
The Interior (I2)
1.718,00 € / per cabin
2.328,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
The Interior (I3)
The Interior (I3)
1.738,00 € / per cabin
2.348,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
The Interior (I4)
The Interior (I4)
1.758,00 € / per cabin
2.368,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Sea View (E1)
Sea View (E1)
2.078,00 € / per cabin
2.688,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Sea View (E2)
Sea View (E2)
2.158,00 € / per cabin
2.768,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Mini Suite (MS)
Mini Suite (MS)
2.300,00 € / per cabin
2.658,00 € / per cabin
3.268,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Group Individual
Sea Balcony (B1)
Sea Balcony (B1)
2.378,00 € / per cabin
2.988,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Sea Balcony (B2)
Sea Balcony (B2)
2.438,00 € / per cabin
3.048,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Sea Balcony (B3)
Sea Balcony (B3)
2.478,00 € / per cabin
3.088,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
MyCruise
Suite (S)
Suite (S)
3.860,00 € / per cabin
4.418,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Group Individual
Grand Suite (GS)
Grand Suite (GS)
4.660,00 € / per cabin
5.518,00 € / per cabin
Price for 2 adults
Group Individual

Costa Fascinosa

Costa Fascinosa

Welcome on board Costa Fascinosa

A tribute to theatre and cinema classics, each deck is inspired by characters, stories, and memorable works, such as Aida, Tosca and Dr Zhivago. This is where you can enjoy all kinds of entertainment, from evening shows to relaxation at the spa or by the pool.
And for the kids? There is an Aqua Park just for them and a fairy-tale castle where they can imagine all the greatest adventures.
And there’s even more: musicalscasinogame rooms and lounge bars to play the leading role of your holiday, as though you were living in a film.

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Featured activities

Balcony Cabins
524
Balcony Cabins
Swimming pools and hot tubs
9
Swimming pools and hot tubs
Restaurants and snack bars
6
Restaurants and snack bars
Bars and Lounges
12
Bars and lounges