101 Nights, Four Continents, Zero Compromises: Regent Just Opened Bookings on Its Most Ambitious Voyages Ever
Regent Seven Seas just unveiled its 2028-2029 Legendary Journeys Collection - three Grand Voyages up to 101 nights long crossing four continents. Here's what we know and why serious cruisers should pay attention right now.
If you’ve ever fantasized about trading your annual one-week cruise for something that actually lets you breathe - to linger, explore, and genuinely immerse yourself in a destination instead of sprinting through it - Regent Seven Seas Cruises just made that fantasy bookable.
As reported by Cruise Industry News, Regent opened reservations on April 29, 2026 for its 2028-2029 Legendary Journeys Collection: three Grand Voyages ranging from 61 to 101 nights, spanning four continents, and built around what the line calls the ultimate modern luxury - time.
Three Voyages, One Big Idea
The collection is anchored by a simple but powerful philosophy. As Regent president Wesley D’Silva put it: “Today’s luxury travelers view time as the ultimate indulgence, offering the freedom to explore more deeply.”
That philosophy is baked into every routing decision across all three itineraries. Rather than grazing port lists and rushing passengers through highlights, these voyages are designed to slow down.
Here is what’s on offer:
Grand Pathways of Europe - 101 Nights
Aboard the freshly refurbished Seven Seas Mariner, this voyage departs Barcelona on May 30, 2028, and winds its way to Amsterdam. The routing is genuinely ambitious - it covers the Iberian Peninsula, the British Isles, Iceland, Greenland, Scandinavia, and the Baltics, including a Kiel Canal transit and an overnight in Copenhagen. Four overnight port stays are built into the itinerary, giving guests the rare chance to experience a destination after the day-trippers have gone home.
Grand Hemispheres Journey - 101 Nights
Seven Seas Explorer departs Athens on October 21, 2028, bound for Auckland in a voyage that stitches together some of the most dramatic geography on earth. The routing traces the coastlines of East Africa and the Arabian Sea, overnights in Mumbai, pushes through Southeast Asia, calls at Bali, traces Australia’s coastline, and then island-hops through the South Pacific. Five overnight stays are included. At 101 nights, this is the kind of voyage that genuinely changes how you see the world.
Grand Silk Seas Passage - 61 Nights
The most focused of the three, Seven Seas Splendor departs Tokyo on November 4, 2028, for Hong Kong via an extended deep-dive into Asia. Japan, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines are all on the itinerary, with extended stays in Bali among the five overnight port calls.
What’s Included - And It’s a Lot
These are Regent sailings, which means the all-inclusive model is in full effect - and then some. Beyond the standard Regent inclusions like unlimited shore excursions, premium spirits, specialty dining, and business-class airfare (where applicable), the Legendary Journeys Collection layers on additional perks calibrated for multi-month living at sea.
Guests receive a one-night pre-cruise hotel stay with dinner, exclusive shoreside cultural events curated specifically for these voyages, door-to-door luggage service, unlimited valet laundry with dry-cleaning, daily minibar replenishment, dedicated phone time per suite, and commemorative gifts.
It is, by any measure, a comprehensive package designed for people who want to simply arrive and experience - not manage logistics.
Why This Matters Right Now
The opening of reservations today is not an idle announcement. Grand Voyage inventory at the ultra-luxury tier moves deliberately but decisively. The guests who book 100-night sailings on ships like Seven Seas Explorer and Seven Seas Splendor are experienced enough to know that the best suites and the best departure windows go early, even on voyages that are nearly three years away.
There is also a broader signal here worth noting. Regent is not alone in leaning into extended, immersive itineraries - the ultra-luxury segment has been quietly shifting away from port-quantity and toward port-depth for several years. But 101-night voyages that open for booking more than two years in advance represent a genuine commitment to that thesis. This is not a marketing experiment. This is where Regent sees its market going.
For the cruise enthusiast who has done the Caribbean dozens of times and is eyeing the horizon for something that will genuinely redefine what a cruise can be, this is the collection worth watching - and acting on sooner rather than later.
More information and reservations are available at rssc.com/legendary-journeys.