Cruise passenger volumes reached 37.7 million in 2025 – well above pre-pandemic levels of 29.7 in 2019. The industry now supports ~1.6 million jobs, contributing ~$170 billion to the global economy. For much of the past three years, this increased revenue has been framed as a recovery story – this framing is now outdated, and the industry is entering a new phase.
Cruise is no longer a niche corner of leisure: it is a fast-growing, scaled platform undergoing a period of structural change.
The sector is fast-growing, with meaningful headroom for expansion given current penetration. Cruise has been one of the fastest growing segments in global travel for the past two decades, with passenger volume expanding at approximately 5-7% CAGR – excluding the COVD-19 period – materially ahead of both GDP and broader travel spend growth.
Growth in the US has outpaced growth in Europe, leaving significant headroom for expansion. With a global fleet of over 300 ships and 650,000 berths, even modest increases in penetration would translate into millions more passengers – for example, increasing European penetration by 1%pt would increase result in ~5m more passengers.
The pandemic left cruise operators with elevated leverage following a prolonged shutdown; debt-funded liquidity ensured operators survived the COVID shutdown, but significant expanded balance sheets. Following the lifting of COVID restrictions and the resumption of BAU, major operators have seen EBITDA, strong pricing, better booking visibility and rising free cash flow – supporting more sustainable investment and capital allocation.
As leverage rises, operators regain strategic flexibility:
Cruise now represents one of the clearest free cash flow injection stories in global leisure, with investor focus shifting from balance sheet repair to capital allocation strategy.
The current order book includes approximately 81 new ships on order, representing a ~25-35% increase in Global capacity in 2026 – and c.$85bn in capital investment.
The new generation of ships are larger, more energy-efficient and more commercially optimised, with design focused on:
Innovations – such as The Haven’s ‘ship-within-a-ship’ premium zones and district-based layouts will change both guest experience and revenue models.
One of the most underrated shifts in cruise is the rapid professionalisation of its supplier base.
What was once a fragmented concession model is moving into a sophisticated and integrated B2B ecosystem. Retail operators, food and beverage partners, connectivity providers and revenue management specialists are increasingly data-led, using analytics, customer segmentation and real-time insights to optimise the guest journey.
This shift reflects a broader transition from transactional to strategic relationships; from siloed revenue streams to total journey optimisation; from static offers to dynamic, personalised experiences.
As the cruise supply model matures, shifting value pools raise strategic questions on vertical integration, data ownership and long-term margins.
Recent entrants blur the lines between boutique hotel, private yacht and experiential travel, changing consumer perceptions of cruise. While luxury entrants are small in capacity, they exert disproportionate influence on brand perception, premium pricing and customer demographics – which could have significant implications.
Key strategic questions are emerging:
Premiumisation in cruise has the potential to reshape long-term margin structures.
Cruise operators manage a uniquely powerful, vertically integrated captive demand ecosystem, where significant revenue upside remains.
Beyond ticket revenue, operators monetise through retail, food and beverage, excursions, casino, connectivity and pre-cruise upsell. Onboard revenue already represents c.1/3rd of revenue.
There are opportunities to drive yield per passenger per day higher, and this may be the source of the next wave of value creation, rather than increasing capacity.
Significant upside exists in:
Cruise is still highly intermediated vs other travel verticals, but operators are now shifting to more direct bookings, with tech creating new opportunities.
Cruise is a complex product, especially for new cruisers, with many choices being shaped around brand, itineraries, rooms and packages. As a result, agents continue to capture a high share of cruise bookings compared to other modes of travel, as cruisers look for guidance.
This is beginning to shift as operators invest in direct channels, digital platforms and app ecosystems to enable end-to-end customer journeys and in-app monetisation.
There is also an emerging opportunity to leverage tech and AI to help simplify decision-making and reduce reliance on agents – though it remains unclear how this would evolve and which players would be best positioned to capitalise on it.
Cruise combines sustained structural growth, visible deleveraging, multi-year capital commitments, evolving distribution economics, a professionalising supplier eco-system and premium-led brand disruption. Few leisure sectors match this scale, capital intensity, and strategic change.
The cruise industry is being redefined, with the next decade determining how value is created and captured for operators, suppliers, investors and infrastructure players.
Those who actively shape strategy across fleet, brand, revenue and eco-system positioning will define the next generation of winners.
At OC&C, we support the full cruise ecosystem, from operators to investors, across strategy, fleet and brand, revenue, capital allocation, diligence, and value creation. Contact our experts below to find out how we can support your strategy.
Associate Partner
Partner
Partner
Partner
Partner
To access the full report, please complete the form below.
"*" indicates required fields