Montreal to Fort Lauderdale
SAIL & SAVE
Sail & Save
Offer ends 31 March 2026

Cruise overview
From Montreal we journey along the Saint Lawrence River to Québec City to explore the cobbled streets of the UNESCO-listed old town. In Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine, try kayaking, cycling, or hiking along the red sandstone cliffs. Next, we reach Nova Scotia, calling at Sydney and Halifax to explore seafaring history and eat lobster rolls, then Saint John in New Brunswick, home to reversing rapids and sweeping tides. Onwards we go, into U.S. waters for Portland and more lobsters, and Boston for clam chowder. At Newport, Rhode Island, there are Gilded Age mansions to see before we arrive in dazzling New York City for an overnight stay. Next comes a relaxing day at sea as we cross to the Bahamas. The Royal Naval Dockyard is our port of call, the historic setting for exciting entertainment venues and great restaurants. Two more days at sea transport us to another place steeped in history, Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic; find out more about the island in the museum at our next stop, Samana. Then it’s on to San Juan, the lively capital of Puerto Rico, and Jost Van Dyke in the British Virgin Islands, where you can take a dip in Bubbly Pool, Mother Nature’s Jacuzzi. Hit the beach in St John’s in Antigua – they say there’s one for every day of the year on this island – and shop ’til you drop in glamorous St Barts. Next is St Thomas in the US Virgin Islands – take the cable car into the hills for a grand overview – before a relaxing passage to our final stop, vibrant Fort Lauderdale.
Itinerary
Montréal, Québec
Canada’s most diverse metropolis, Montréal, is an island city that favors style and elegance over order or even prosperity, a city where past and present intrude on each other daily. In some ways it resembles Vienna—well past its peak of power and glory, perhaps, yet still vibrant and grand.But don’t get the wrong idea. Montréal has always had a bit of an edge. During Prohibition, thirsty Americans headed north to the city on the St. Lawrence for booze, music, and a good time, and people still come for the same things. Summer festivals celebrate everything from comedy and French music and culture to beer and fireworks, and, of course, jazz. And on those rare weeks when there isn’t a planned event, the party continues. Clubs and sidewalk cafés are abuzz from late afternoon to the early hours of the morning. And Montréal is a city that knows how to mix it up even when it’s 20 below zero. Rue St-Denis is almost as lively on a Saturday night in January as it is in July, and the festival Montréal en Lumière, or Montréal Highlights, enlivens the dreary days of February with concerts, balls, and fine food.Montréal takes its name from Parc du Mont-Royal, a stubby plug of tree-covered igneous rock that rises 764 feet above the surrounding cityscape. Although its height is unimpressive, “the Mountain” forms one of Canada’s finest urban parks, and views from the Chalet du Mont-Royal atop the hill provide an excellent orientation to the city’s layout and major landmarks.Old Montréal is home to museums, the municipal government, and the magnificent Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Montréal within its network of narrow, cobblestone streets. Although Montréal’s centre-ville, or Downtown, bustles like many other major cities on the surface, it’s active below street level as well, in the so-called Underground City–-the underground levels of shopping malls and food courts connected by pedestrian tunnels and the city’s subway system, or métro. Residential Plateau Mont-Royal and trendy neighborhoods are abuzz with restaurants, nightclubs, art galleries, and cafés. The greener areas of town are composed of the Parc du Mont-Royal and the Jardin Botanique.
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Quebec City, Québec
At sea
Magdalen Islands, Québec
Sydney, Nova Scotia
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Saint-John, New Brunswick
Portland, Maine
Boston, Massachusetts
Newport, Rhode Island
New York, New York
New York, New York
At sea
Kings Wharf
Kings Wharf
At sea
At sea
Santo Domingo
Samaná
San Juan (Puerto Rico)
Great Harbour, Jost Van Dyke
Saint John's
Gustavia
Saint Thomas
At sea
At sea
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Double Guest Room with Ocean View
Bright, inviting accommodation with large picture windows and elegant furnishings.
Amenities
- Queen-size bed
- Marble bathroom
- Flatscreen TV
- Minibar
- WiFi
- 24-hour room service
- Safe
- Hair Dryer
- Telephone
Ship features
Crystal Symphony combines timeless elegance with state-of-the-art facilities, offering the perfect balance of spacious design, attentive service, and immersive destination experiences.
- 606-guest luxury cruise ship
- Refurbished under A&K in 2023
- Seven dining venues and multiple bars
- All accommodations with butler service
- Dedicated solo staterooms and larger suites
- Crystal Life Spa and fitness centre
- Children’s Fantasia & Waves club
- Broadway-style shows and live music
- Expansive pool deck and sports areas
- Award-winning Crystal service and cuisine









