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We tour ‘Brilliant Lady’, the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

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On Wednesday, Virgin Voyages held a preview day in Portsmouth to show off ‘Brilliant Lady’, the fourth (and, for now, final) vessel in its fleet.

On Thursday the ship set off for a test sailing to New York via Dublin and Halifax carrying only ‘friends and family’, before its first proper passenger-carrying voyage in the Caribbean.

We went down for a look. Whilst you could buy tickets for the event for 7,500 Virgin Points (a bargain, given nine hours of unlimited food and drink, including a full restaurant meal), our tickets were comped. Virgin Red also paid for our travel costs and a hotel.

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

I’ve never been on a cruise. In fact, I had never even been on a cruise ship – not even for five minutes, for an event or a tour – which is why I was keen to do this.

(A lot of cruise customers collect frequent flyer miles, because you are often looking at buying one-way flights to and from your vessel if you are not cruising in a circle.)

Am I now convinced that I should? Not really – but if I was, a few days in one of the top ‘Brilliant Lady’ suites with the very decent food and drink available on board would not be a bad choice. I know readers who redeemed Virgin Points for cruises when they were roughly 100,000 points for a week and enjoyed it.

This is NOT a review of the ship – just a few impressions.

The ship looks HUGE when you first see it. There are bigger ships out there, but 1,400 cabins and 17 floors seems enough to me. Here’s an angle you’ll never see again, because it was taken from the bridge:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

Yes, they let a handful of media guests visit the bridge after going through airport-ish security. Here is Conny having a go at being Captain. Disappointingly they don’t have a 3-foot wide Jack Sparrow-style steering wheel. It’s guided by the smallest joystick – about 5cm tall – you’ve ever seen.

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

The bridge itself is huge – far bigger than I ever imagined, running the entire width of the ship – because, despite multiple cameras and screens, the crew need to be able see out from all angles. There are usually only four people there, and often just three.

Let’s cut to the chase. What is the top suite like?! Well, book a ‘Massive Suite’ – right in the bow of the ship – and this is your private terrace:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

Yes, your own whirlpool, a dining table, loungers and some more stuff you can’t see. It’s a bit bonkers. Apparently this is normally taken by small groups, hence the dining table for six – one couple books the ‘Massive Suite’, the rest book standard cabins and then everyone congregates in the suite.

Here’s the living area:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

This is a typical balcony from one of the larger rooms, but even the smallest rooms with a balcony have a hammock:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

Bathrooms are relatively similar irrespective of cabin category, although the ‘Massive Suite’ has a lovely standalone bathtub too.

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

This is the bed of a ‘Rockstar Suite’ – this category has a window into the bathroom behind the bed. The bed itself is similar across all cabins:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

This is a standard cabin with a balcony (there are a few internal cabins too but I didn’t see one) which, realistically, is what most people will book:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

There is so much to see, do, eat and drink on the ship that it is pointless trying to show it all.

There’s a 17th floor running track around the ship:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

…. there’s a 16th floor basketball court:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

…. and boxing ring, there are many areas with loungers and bars:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

…. a very smart theatre, a huge amount of shopping, a casino, a never-ending list of places to eat and drink (but NO buffets – that’s the Virgin Voyages rule) etc etc. It goes on and on.

Here’s the main pool:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

If you book a high-end suite, you get access to ‘Richard’s Rooftop’ which is a large private outdoor area at the bow of the ship. This contains loungers, a bar, a number of jacuzzis etc and is presumably less busy than other areas. Here’s a small part of it:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

You can see above that some guests brought their swimming gear just in case the hot tubs were activated, and got lucky!

We ate in The Test Kitchen, which is an ‘experimental dining’ restaurant. It’s basically a mini Heston Blumenthal-style place, where the name of the item of the menu is just a vague guide to what you will get. Here is venison covered in chocolate sauce:

We tour 'Brilliant Lady', the fourth Virgin Voyages cruise ship

It was pretty good (obviously not Heston-quality, but meals are free on board) and I suspect the sort of thing that marks out Virgin Voyages from the competition. Note that most alcoholic drinks on board are not free, but packages are available.

We’ve only touched on a fraction of what is available. Despite six hours on the ship I know there is a lot I didn’t see, including a large fitness centre with free classes.

What I hope I’ve got across is that Virgin Voyages is NOT your archetypal pensioner-filled cruise line. (It isn’t kid-filled either – children are not allowed.) I even felt that, in my 50’s, I might be a bit old for the target market but I suspect – with the ability to pick and choose how you relax and how you eat and drink – I’d find enough to like. Tips and gratuities are not allowed either, so that’s one less thing to worry about.

If this has piqued your interest, you can find out more about ‘Brilliant Lady’ and the rest of the fleet on the Virgin Voyages website here.

You can spend Virgin Points on Virgin Voyages cruises but it is now pretty much revenue based redeeming and the pence per point ratio isn’t usually too great. You can earn points on cash bookings – see the Virgin Red app for details – but at a weirdly poor rate of 100 points per person per night.

Thanks to the Virgin Red team for the invite.

Comments (70)

  • patrick says:

    I never thought I would cruise in a million years but for 95,000 points I could not resist in 2022. I then went in again at 80,000 in 2023 and then in 2024 for 120,000. As the article suggests the incredible value of those days has gone but I have booked for 2026 for £2,200 which is still just about good value. If you match Hilton Diamond to MSC cruises top tier, VV will match that which is most definitely a good move.

  • TimM says:

    Well done Rob for dipping your toe in the water, almost.

    I can see Virgin Voyages going the same way as ‘easyCruise’ and other cruise lines that tried to be different and appeal to younger people, in this case without children. That is quite a niche market.

    The essence of a cruise is based on liners of old, e.g. when the British were travelling to and from India by ship or the emigrants were going to America – tradition and service, not jacuzzis and chain-branded restaurants.

    A cruise ship is simply a floating hotel. The larger it is, the fewer ports it can call at. Many times I have witnessed the restaurant and shop prices go up as soon as they see a cruise ship arriving.

    When I have been on a ‘cruise’, it has always been from one part of the World to another. I have been between Europe and Brazil and Panama several times, from Singapore, via India and the Middle East up Suez to Rome and the classic Southampton to New York Cunard run a few times too. The pleasure is the sea – always mesmerising, like a coal fire – dressing up for dinner and getting to know new people at your table, not features and brand names.

  • Ralphy says:

    We were on board too! We dipped our toe on our first Virgin Cruise when a week around the Med was 85k points and did two weeks back to back. I think it’s might be nearer 400k points if and when available. We have cruised 6 or 7 times now, always across the Atlantic for the repositioning cruises that offer incredible value. The Test Kitchen is marmite but all other restaurants are excellent and are included whilst every other cruise longer charges for premium dining experiences it’s included with Virgin. As is the free ice cream, chargeable on most other ships. We are now Deep Blue Extras, so, an extra $100 bar credit, early boarding, free daily premium coffees and a huge free laundry bag. The one thing in the article you didn’t nail is the age range. Adults only, it is 30s to 60s generally across the bell curve with a few outliers. For me the Virgin adults only model works and I see no reason for it to not endure. Virgin definitely does things differently to other cruise lines and is building a loyal following because of this. I can definitely recommend it, no one will leave this cruise feeling anything other than elated from their experience.

  • Sue says:

    Sorry Rob but this didn’t in fact PIQUE my interest……

    • AJA says:

      Well spotted! This article was enough of a peek into what Virgin offers. Doesn’t pique my interest either!

  • Nancy says:

    My idea of hell! But, as always, a great read.

  • planeconcorde says:

    Virgin Voyages like to do things differently to other cruise lines. Unfortunately they have yet to realise that different is not necessarily better. Having done over 80 cruises, 3 of them on Virgin ships, for me there are better cruise lines available.

    • patrick says:

      80? Wow. Which cruise lines would you suggest for a single traveller looking for a peaceful experience please?

      • paul says:

        We’re on cruise No 76 or 77 now.

        Celebrity or Princess but the single supplements can mean you pay 150% to 200% of a std cruise fare.

        There are some lines who have studio cabins and some with no surcharges – contact a travel agent or online cruise company to discuss

      • IanT says:

        Norwegian and MSC are good for solos (they have some cabins which carry no supplement).

        I did an Alaska cruise with a mate (MrsT didn’t want to go as it was ‘too cold’!), and the solo cabin was perfect.

  • Matthew says:

    If you fall into the Virgin demographic, you will have a pleasant time… otherwise avoid. Even from the limited comments above, it’s clear, it’s ideal for the ‘hip and fun’ crowd, not the old and boring.

    We thoroughly enjoyed ours back in 2022, it’s certainly an experience for a first time cruiser!

    • patrick says:

      I am old and boring and go every year – the essential aspects are a balcony and access to Richard`s rooftop – a civilized experience is then perfectly possible I reckon.

    • Peeps says:

      Old and boring here too but loved all my Virgin cruises to date (3 on points and 1 paid). What I have discovered is that on VV there is a place and ‘fun’ for everyone …. from 18 to 80+. I’m off on Brilliant Lady in November to Caribbean and then in May 2026 to Alaska. In September 2026 I’m looking forward to Iceland, Greenland, Canada and New York and I can’t wait.

  • David says:

    We’ve cruised on the other three (Scarlet, Valiant and Resilient) from the UK, in the Caribbean and around Greece/Turkey. The thing we’ve found on board is that it is very different from other cruise companies both in terms of staff, other passengers and whats available. It’s very LGBT friendly on board.

    We’ve really enjoyed all of our cruises and most people we know when they sailed go on and rebook again (and again)

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